The portfolio doesn't build itself
There is a moment most investors don't see coming.
The equity is there. The property has performed. On paper the position looks strong. Then they speak to their broker and find out the next purchase isn't possible. Not because the market failed them. Because their income and cash flow position hasn't moved in two years.
The asset did its job. The investor didn't do theirs.
What most investors get wrong about serviceability
When that conversation with the broker doesn't go the way they expected, most investors reach for the same diagnosis. The properties aren't returning enough. If the yield was higher, or the rent was stronger, the position would look different.
That is the wrong diagnosis.
Serviceability is assessed primarily on personal income. What you earn. Your salary, your business income, the money that hits your account before the properties are involved. Rental income from investment properties is included by lenders, but at a discount, typically somewhere between seventy and eighty cents in the dollar. It supports the position. It does not create it.
The investor waiting for the portfolio to generate enough income to fund the next purchase is working the wrong lever. The portfolio grows over time. It is not the engine of the next purchase. You are.
The gap between two investors
There is an investor who treats the properties as the strategy. Income, spending, the offset, the rent review, all of it sits in the background. Not ignored. Just never the focus. The assumption running underneath everything is that the assets will carry the weight over time.
