Nah mate its started. And the more buyers hold off the more pressure on vendor thus confirming buyers nervousness thus holding off longer putting greater pressure on vendors..........crash.
I think you're getting carried away here. A 1% in interest rates(IR) has made potential buyers wary and worried about how high they are going. Another 50 basis points is baked in the cake and recently some ECB members have hinted at maybe more after that.
But if you think even a 4% ECB rate is going to crash this market I think you're mistaken. Belief in property is just to deep to be shaken by a 2% rise in IR. Look at the UK and AUS. The markets there stalled when IR first rose. Then when it seemed that IR had plateaued the property markets picked up again. Now it looks like IR in both countries are rising again. This might be where the real pain begins.
In the US IR went from !% to 5.25% in 18 months and that plus the negative savings rate that buggered their property market.
So if the ECB gets to say 3.75% and then goes on hold , I think the market will pick up again. There is just too many believers out there. If IR start to rise again say in late 07 or 08 it could get interesting. I would guess you would need at least a 5% ECB rate to see many forced sellers.
Repeat after me : This all about interest rates!
hurray? what about the implications of a crash on our economy?
Conversely, what about the implications of continued insane house price inflation on our economy? Or even a "soft landing" in circumstances which put home ownership out of reach of the next generation? It's damned if it does, damned if it dithers and damned if it doesn't. As a pre-madness homeowner, I want to trade up and the differential is currently too wide for that to happen. Given that all outcomes are bad, a crash would suit me rather better.
Repeat after me : This all about interest rates!
tyoung;281716[SIZE=2 said:I would guess you would need at least a 5% ECB rate to see many forced sellers.[/SIZE]
No, this is all about sentiment. If you read histories of previous real estate bubbles you'll notice that no one factor can be said to have caused their reversal, not even interest rates. What has caused their collapse is the accumulation of events that cause sentiment to change. And once the sentiment changes things fall apart fairly rapidly.
I would guess you would need at least a 5% ECB rate to see many forced sellers.
I would guess you would need at least a 5% ECB rate to see many forced sellers.
Have you not been paying attention? The ECB has spent the last 6 months telling everyone in clear, unambiguous language (well, clear and unambiguous by central banker standards) that they are moving to at least a neutral rate of interest, and may adopt a tight stance if inflation remains above the 2% target.
That means 5% by spring 2008.
I think the entire world has gone completely nuts, drunk on ridiculously cheap credit for the last decade. The party is already over: the Fed, ECB and even the BoJ have all called time and announced a tightening phase. Japanese deflation ended last year, and that means the end of the Yen carry trade, and that means....
Try and focus through the euphoria. The hangover is coming.
BTW Morgan Stanley's European Team see the natural IR for Euroland at about 3%
If I could predict interest rates accurately 12 months out I'd give up the day job. I see 3.75 to 4% early next year but after that the crystal ball gets very cloudy.
Duplex
While I aree that the global economy will have an effect I disagree with you on the nature of the effect. A US recession will lead to a rapid fall in Global interest rates which could lead to the fabled soft landing for the Irish property market. It looks like US rates have peaked. As I've posted before,from an Irish point of view, the worst thing would be that the fed might be forced to come back and raise interest rates next year in the face of stubborn inflation. Some thing like that is happening in GB and AUS right now. Let's see how it plays out.
Sidewinder
If I could predict interest rates accurately 12 months out I'd give up the day job. I see 3.75 to 4% early next year but after that the crystal ball gets very cloudy.
BTW Morgan Stanley's European Team see the natural IR for Euroland at about 3%
Babytooth
I'm sorry but i don't follow your post.
" High rates imply low yields" (on what?)
Sidewinder
In August their European economist said that 3.5% would be very near the Natural rate. I agree with your comments but I don't set interest rates. Central Bankers do and they are appointed by politicans who are elected by the great unwashed who want easy money.
That's just the way it is!
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