Key takeaways
Focus on quality, not quantity. You don’t need many properties to build wealth, just a few high-quality, investment-grade assets held long term.
Avoid chasing short-term “hotspots”. Markets that boom quickly often stagnate for years, delivering poor long-term returns despite early hype.
Use the “Forever Test” when buying. Only invest in properties you’d be comfortable holding for decades, not ones that just look good today.
Capital growth is the real wealth driver. Cash flow helps you hold assets, but long-term capital growth is what creates financial freedom.
Boring, proven assets outperform speculative ones. Well-located properties in major city suburbs consistently outperform trendy or high-yield investments over time.
There's a question I get asked constantly, and it's almost always framed the wrong way.
"Michael, how many properties do I need to retire?"
The better question, the one that actually leads to wealth, this: "What kind of properties do I need to own?"
After 50 years of investing, I can tell you that the investors who've truly built life-changing wealth didn't necessarily do it by accumulating a large portfolio of average properties.
They did it by owning a handful of genuinely great ones and holding them long enough for compounding to do its magic.
Quality over quantity isn't just a slogan. It's the whole game.

The shiny object problem
Here's what I see again and again…
An investor reads about a regional town posting 20% growth in 12 months. They get excited. They buy. The early buyers did well, sure.
But those who followed the headlines? They end up holding a property that goes sideways for a decade.
I've watched this cycle play out again and again.
In the early 2000s, it was mining towns including Townsville units with high yields and positive cash flow -they seemed perfect on paper.
Many of those properties that sold for $140,000 to $170,000 back in 2003 are worth $450,000 to $500,000 today.
Now that sounds impressive until you do the maths. It's less than 5% per annum compounded over 23 years. Barely beating inflation. Certainly not building wealth.
And yet, at the time, everyone was talking about it.
Note: Short-term returns never create long-term value.
There's always someone dangling a shiny object, trying to pull you into a short-term decision. The problem is that chasing that shiny object always comes at the expense of something more prosperous over the long run.
What actually builds wealth: the "forever" test
Leading financial advisor Stuart Wemyss from ProSolution recently wrote about what he calls the "Forever Test" - and it nails the principle perfectly.
The idea is simple. When you're evaluating an investment, ask yourself: "Would I be happy to own this forever?"
Not "will this do well this year?" Not "is the yield attractive right now?"
But, is this the kind of asset I'd be comfortable holding for 20, 30, even 40 years?
That reframe changes everything, because when you think in decades, not months, the criteria for what makes a great property become crystal clear. You want:
- Scarce land in locations where supply can't easily increase
- Strong owner-occupier appeal - because these buyers don't negotiate based on yield spreadsheets, they pay based on emotion and aspiration
- Proven long-term demand drivers - good schools, transport, lifestyle, employment hubs
- Inner and middle-ring suburbs of our major cities, ideally in areas undergoing gentrification
These are the properties that attract quality tenants, hold their value in downturns, and recover faster when markets soften.
They're also, not coincidentally, the properties that are hardest to find and most expensive to buy - which is exactly the point.
Why capital growth beats cash flow (every time)
I know this is a controversial position, but I've never wavered on it.
Note: Cash flow keeps you in the game. Capital growth gets you out of the rat race.
Cheap, high-yielding properties in secondary locations might look attractive on a spreadsheet today. But they rarely grow at “Wealth Producing Rates of Return.”
And if your property isn't working hard, you're working hard - managing tenants, dealing with maintenance, refinancing - without actually building wealth.
Investment-grade properties, on the other hand, deliver most of their return as capital growth. That means the ATO isn't constantly taking a slice of your gains.
Your wealth builds quietly, compounding year after year, until the numbers become almost hard to believe.
Now, that's not theory. That's what Einstein was getting at when he called compound interest the eighth wonder of the world. The problem is that compounding is invisible at the start.
For the first decade it can feel like nothing is happening. But the longer you hold a quality asset, the more ferocious the compounding becomes.
You don't need many properties. You need the right ones.
You probably don't need as many quality properties as you think.
While you may only be able to buy one property at a time, your investment-grade property should be the springboard to future property purchases as your equity builds up. That's the strategic sequence - quality first, then leverage that equity to acquire the next quality asset.
And so it compounds.
The average investor buys for cash flow. The strategic investor buys for what the property enables them to do next.
Boring and proven beats exciting and speculative
I know "well-located, established property in an inner or middle ring suburb" doesn't sound exciting.
It doesn't have the same buzz as "emerging regional hotspot" or "high-yield cash cow."
But after watching countless investors succeed and fail, I can tell you this with absolute confidence: boring and proven beats exciting and speculative, every single time.
If you buy quality assets in investment-grade locations, even in uncertain times, you're unlikely to regret it in the long run.
The media will always find something new to talk about. Some new pocket of the market that's "moving." Some new strategy that "works right now."
Your job as a serious investor is to tune that noise out and stay anchored to fundamentals.
Ask yourself the “Forever Test” and then buy the property you'd be happy to own for the rest of your life. Then hold it, protect it, and let time do the heavy lifting.
That's not a complex strategy. But it's the one that actually works.
Where to from here?
If you’re serious about building a high-performing property portfolio, it pays to get the right guidance from the start.
At Metropole, we don’t just help you buy property - we help you build a strategic, long-term wealth plan tailored to your goals, risk profile, and financial position.
If you’d like clarity around what you should be buying, where you should be buying, and how to structure your portfolio for sustainable growth…
Click here now to organise a time to have a chat with a Metropole Wealth Strategists.
It could be the difference between ending up with a handful of average properties or building a portfolio that genuinely sets you up for life.




