N
Neffa
Guest
You're probably right but even if they're being overstated by 50% they're still huge numbers.
Just thinking about this point.
London agents have often said that 2% of property for sale is effectively breakeven. Above that and you generally see prices trend downwards, below that and their is insufficient supply so prices rise.
In fact, one of the odd things we noticed about property in Dublin after returning from London was just how little there was for sale (I'm talking about the 3-4 bed family homes market, not the glut of 1-2 bed apartments). In our old street in London, with about 130 houses on it, 3 or so were sold every year. Contrast that with the area in Dublin we live in now where only 3 houses out of 500+ have sold in the last year.
We know from the census that there are about 1.8-1.9m households in the country. So it looks like Daft has 0.9% of the entire housing stock for sale at present. Question is - how much of the market do they cover? If it is only about 40% of the market, then that would suggest we are heading towards a tipping point. If they have a lot more than that, then perhaps supply is still tight.