Well, first off, social commentary on economic trends hardly equates to sound financial advice.
So... Tip #1: Don't seek specific investment advice from the peanut gallery of a service provider board.
Having said that, why on earth would you want to buy anything right now????
I’d say it makes more sense to diversify your finances instead of swallowing a piece of real estate. We are at the absolute end of the boom, and not even at the end of the
beginning of the bust.
Buying Real Estate at this time is catching a falling knife.
But, what the hey, let's look at it for a second.
You've got $420,000 invested at 3.25% (let's assume we keep this rate for the course of the year).
You want to take $255,000 out to buy a condo. Factor in closing costs, legal fees and you're adding minimum of $10,000 to that.
So you have $265,000 that would have been earning $8,612.50 annually @3.25% (or $717.71 per month).
Your question is should you convert that to a condo with a rental income of $14,400 per year (a difference of and extra $5,787.50/yr or $482.29/mth).
Hey, what a deal. If you were actually making almost an extra $6,000 per year!
But you are not.
First off, you have to factor in other expenses.
Start with property tax (approximately 0.5% of the purchase price with is normally paid once a year). That takes $1,275 off the $5,787.50 = $4,512.50
Set aside money for maintenance ($800.00/yr), insurance ($1,000/yr), and a minimum expectation of one month where the place sits empty without a tennant ($1,200/mth, no rent) and now our net profit for the year is reduced by another $3,000 and takes us down to $1,512.50/yr ($126 per month).
Finally... don't forget income tax. Subtract a minimum of 33% for CRA ($499.13) and your profit for the year is $1,013.37 or $84.45 per month.
Your questioning the wisdom of your GIC for the sake of an extra $84.45 per month in extra revenue????
And that says nothing about the time you spend dealing with a tennant, the buildings strata council (god help you if it turns into a leaky condo), etc.
Then there is the future of real estate.
Even the conservative estimates are predicting the real estate market to drop 10% of it's value in 2009. That takes $25,000 from your investment.
That's a net loss of $23,487.50.
Your question, therefore, is: Should I be happy making $8,612.50 annually or should I pump equity into a potentially declining asset and lose $23,487.50 on the year?
IMHO, I would look for other options for your GIC.