Australian couple Scott and Mina O'Neill own 25 Australian properties after starting their investment portfolio with $15,700.
While most millennials are struggling to save a deposit for one home, Gen Y couple Scott and Mina O'Neill own 25.
Unlike most 22 and 23-year-olds, who are fresh out of university and spending almost every dollar they earn from their first fulltime job at the pub every weekend, this Sydney couple were purchasing their first property - an ugly, old home in Sutherland, in Sydney's south, which they bought for A$480,000 ($503,000) to 'rentvest' their way into the market.
That was in 2010. Fast forward to 2016 and Scott, 29, and Mina, 28, own a 25-strong property investment portfolio worth more than $10.5 million.
Just three years prior to purchasing that first investment property in Sutherland, however, Mr and Mrs O'Neill had just A$15,000 ($15,700) in the bank between the two of them.
But the decision to knuckle-down and save for the next three years was a very natural one for the pair, who both grew up with steadfast, savvy parents. They said it was this dedication that was really all it took to turn that A$15,000 ($15,700) into their first deposit.
"My father was an accountant by trade but an investor part-time, so I was always interested in [investing] from a very young age," Mr O'Neill told news.com.au.
"What made me really start thinking about [investing] was when I was about 12-years-old, my father told me to buy some Telstra shares ... and I got about $50 back in dividends at the time. Fifty dollars when you are a child is a lot of money and I was pretty thrilled to get that for 'free', so that got me thinking about getting returns on money rather than just saving it."
Mrs O'Neill, who is the child of immigrant Egyptian and Greek parents, said dedication was "ingrained" in her from a young age after seeing her parents sacrifice.
"Both my parents came from poor families, so saving was number one - saving to survive for your family was number one," she told news.com.au.
"I was bought up in a family where a dollar could be two dollars if you put your mind to it. My dad invested as soon as he could get his cash on something. Coming from a very, very poor family with 12 siblings, everything was rationed. He had to work hard and he wanted return on that hard work.
"So all I did was work my butt off as much as I could, and sacrifice. Even though my income was very little at the time, every time I got it I would think how much I could set aside for myself and how much I needed to save to reach each goal."
At the time of purchasing their first home in their early-twenties, Mr O'Neill was working as an engineer and Mrs O'Neill was working in retail.
BUILDING AN EMPIRE
One you overcome the hurdle of purchasing your first property, the couple are adamant that building a portfolio is much easier.
"The first property is definitely the hardest and the second one is the second hardest, and so forth," Mr O'Neill said.
"When you buy that first one - let's say you purchase it for $400,000 and it grows in value to $500,000 over a few years, then you can go back to the bank and refinance 80 per cent, hypothetically, of the new purchase price. That will give you access to $80,000 - 80 per cent of the $100,000 growth - and you can use that to put a deposit on the next house."
But they key to making sure you're taking on good debt that you can handle is to focus on rental yields, rather than just capital growth.
"You have got to make sure the rent covers that extra debt you have caused on the first house and then the new debt on the future house. You don't want to create an inward debt that just spirals," Mr O'Neill said.
"The only way you can own a lot of properties is if you have a really good cash flow. We don't look at anything under 6 per cent gross yield. Never neglect capital gain, but you can't ignore cash flow - and that's what people sometimes do."
Building a successful portfolio is also about taking the emotion out of investing.
"Don't buy in your own backyard ... Getting emotional is such a bad thing," Mr O'Neill warned.
"If you're willing to think like an investor and invest outside of your comfort zone, or your local area, you can find what you need," Mrs O'Neill added.
The couple may reside in Sydney's eastern suburbs but their portfolio includes properties from all over Australia - from Cooma, a small town in southern NSW; to Port Macquarie, a coastal town in NSW; to Labrador, a beachside suburb in the Gold Coast; to Perth.
But the real golden rule to rentvesting your way to a multi-million dollar portfolio is: don't be scared of debt.
"A lot of people are scared of debt and a lot of the critics reading this might say look at how much debt we have got," Mr O'Neill said.
But as they say, you've got to be in it to win it. And by making logical decisions, this couple prove there is such thing as 'good debt'.
"[Our] portfolio will be positively geared at just under a 9 per cent interest rates. What that means is if there are 20 interest rate rises of 0.25 per cent, our portfolio will still be covering all its holding costs. The reason I bring this point up is it will help those who fear debt to understand that there is good debt and bad debt," Mr O'Neill told news.com.au.
And if the pair were in that much crippling debt, then they wouldn't have been able to quit their jobs - which they did, about two years ago.
Replacing their income through property investment has given them the freedom to travel - they recently spent six months travelling Europe and are off to Fiji in a few weeks - and the time to help others do the same. In 2014, the couple started their own property investment business, Rethink.
"We always said it was for ourselves," Mr O'Neill said. "We didn't do this to get rich; it is about buying our time back."