Wednesday, January 20, 2010

'Mingles' and investment properties

What is a 'mingle'? Glad you asked. A mingle is the middle-aged single person from the baby-boomer generation as a social group which is becoming a force to be reckoned with in our property markets. So yuppies and dinks, make way for the "mingles" because here we come!
Mingles are single, independent and know what we want and probably have pets.
So what does this mean for the property investor? This means an increasing demand for smaller houses, units and pet-friendly apartments. While more 45 to 59 year olds are choosing this life style, some mingles do not live alone by choice but by divorce or the death of a partner.
Taken from Michael Yardleys article:
In 1976 the number of Australians in this age group who were single was 381,000," Salt says. "These mingles broke down into three more or less equal categories -- the widowed, the separated and divorced and the never married. The latter group would have contained most of the gay community in this age group at that time."Over the quarter of a century to 2001, the mingles managed to multiply to 834,000. In an era when the middle-aged population has increased by 66 per cent, those ensconced in singledom soared by 119 per cent."But some categories have multiplied faster than others.While the number of middle-aged widows of both genders shrank, the never-marrieds expanded. And the separated and divorced rocketed up in numbers by nearly 400 per cent to over 500,000.These half a million extra mingles underpin a huge demand for housing, so as a property investor it is interesting to understand the type of property that would attract these them.Unlike the young singles who are more likely to live in an inner city or near city high rise apartment, the mingles are more likely to prefer a smaller dwelling or a unit in the middle suburbs.
Remember these single baby boomers are not hermits. Many have a relationship, but they just don't want to live with another person. Particularly if they are recently divorced. Instead they prefer living with animals who require less emotional and physical “maintenance.”

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