This sounds like a very restrictive definition of what constitutes a price drop. You're completely ignoring neighbours that have to sell for less than what neighbours with similar houses were getting last year... I've heard of moving the goalposts, but this takes the biscuit to be honest!I think that we will not be able to say that prices have dropped until either a developer sells a property for less than he got for a similar one, or somebody sells a property for less than they paid for it.
Even under your restrictive definition, this thread describes a case where the developer lowered the price for an individual case. The bank was no longer willing to give the OP a 100% mortgage for the overinflated price that they originally signed the contract on.Has anybody witnessed either of these.
My point is that if people are asking a price that does not reflect the value of the property then reducing the asking price does not mean that the value of the property has dropped. It just means that people were being greedy and chancing their arm and did not get away with it.
I agree but this is not what I have seen.The value of the property is what someone is willing to pay, not what someone asking. If a house is selling for less money that a similar house the year (or months) before that consititues a price drop in the same way that the opposite is true.
They might be worried about being stuck with a property that no longer serves their needs going forward. Maybe their employment prospects are in jeopardy? It's hard to know how many people were encountering financial difficulties these last few years as often they would just withdraw equity (i.e. make a mortgage top up) to solve it. The lack of this safety net may be a big problem in future."sellers" should only be worried about selling if they are in financial problems and need to get rid of their house. I mean they still have a roof over their heads, what is there to be worried about.
Good luck trying to sell your apartment with that attitude!Its this stupidity of dropping prices that is actually causing worry in the market. If people stuck to their guns then there would be no price drops - and buyers would eventually see that the market is not dropping. Then the buying would start again.
Its this stupidity of dropping prices that is actually causing worry in the market. If people stuck to their guns then there would be no price drops - and buyers would eventually see that the market is not dropping. Then the buying would start again.
"sellers" should only be worried about selling if they are in financial problems and need to get rid of their house. I mean they still have a roof over their heads, what is there to be worried about. Its this stupidity of dropping prices that is actually causing worry in the market. If people stuck to their guns then there would be no price drops - and buyers would eventually see that the market is not dropping. Then the buying would start again.
...I think that we will not be able to say that prices have dropped until either a developer sells a property for less than he got for a similar one, or somebody sells a property for less than they paid for it.
Has anybody witnessed either of these.
Saw this on the news today. I got the impression that the developer put the prices of the first phase up over night when he found that people were lining up for the launch. It is obvious that the first phase were greatly overpriced and that the current one is more realistic.The Evening Herald had a story a few days ago about a developer reducing the price for Phase 2 of a development in Delgany. As far as I remember, the first phase had been sold at €700,000 and this phase was on sale at €595,000.
If people stuck to their guns then there would be no price drops - and buyers would eventually see that the market is not dropping. Then the buying would start again.
"sellers" should only be worried about selling if they are in financial problems and need to get rid of their house. I mean they still have a roof over their heads, what is there to be worried about. Its this stupidity of dropping prices that is actually causing worry in the market. If people stuck to their guns then there would be no price drops - and buyers would eventually see that the market is not dropping. Then the buying would start again.
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