CelloPoint
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I hope they don't start blaming the 'Anglo-Saxon' model when things go pear shaped....The last thing this government needs (especially with all the trouble at the moment) is for the bubble to burst before the next election
Not too sure about this at the mo, but:
Anyone think that Bertie will resign over the next couple of days/weeks, ending FF's reign, by calling an early election? Remember what instigated Albert Reynolds's exit - a beef tribunal (which we've since all forgotten about). Is Bertie's 'dark incident from the past' the smoke screen that is needed for him to vanish off the stage in a puff, leaving somebody else to pick up the pieces once the house of cards collapses?
</end of (plausible) conspiracy theory>
good point, what i have read is that worldwide there is very little correlation between residential and commercial property inflation, dont know whats the the correlation in irish commercial and residential markets... any ideas?as a consumer my debt servicing is not imapacted by lets say intels or jury's debt.. theirs depends on economy, or macro economics, im not economist though take it by grain of salt,
Zac - see below, central bank is good source of facts on debt.
From Central Bank sectoral report.
This shows that during 12 months to June 2006 the manufacturing sector was borrowing almost 15m a week while the mortgage / construction / real estate industry was borrowing almost 1,000m a week. For other industries the figures are even weaker.
Suggests things may be just a little unbalanced to support growth in prices all the way to 2010.
[broken link removed]
Our GDP / GNP is on steriods anyway because of all the investment in property and borrowing mania. We are dependent on property so one can cut the above by 10% to 20% if property market crashes. Do some sress testing excluding some construction froth and ratios jump. Fitch have spotted this and put it on the agendas of all the banks in Europe financing bank borrowing here who will now focus more on Irish banks balance sheets which are largely comprised of ....property lending. This is why Irish banks will be loath to admit any problems because if they do the European banks will reach for the taps.
Commercial property will lag the economy downwards - if we stop buying Range Rovers the dealer will eventually get a cut in his rent or move / downsize.
When theres too many houses/apartments/offices then construction will slow dramatically, i feel we are close to supply exceeding demand, we'll still need 50-60k units a year but this implies a 40% reduction in homebuilding. Can we stick to sentiment on this thread, the debt debate has been debated before and its inevitable that credit growth will slow significanty soon (1-3 years), and with less credit there will be less money leant by banks and hence less credit to drive up prices. A correction is inevitable, its all about timing now.Maine, interesting points indeed, finally seen somebody with cold hard numbers, things are definitely unbalanced in irish economy, construction sector too big a proportion of the economy on the basis of comparison that i hv seen with uk and other eu countries...
problem is things can stay unbalanced or irrational for longer than you and i can imagine(or stay solvent trying to capitalize on those unbalances)
what do u think
All this talk of "in-the-know-ness" is annoying me now (a recurring theme in this thread). Either name this well-known property developer, or stop boasting on AAM about the fact that you are "in-the-know" more so than anybody else. I'm sure your intention was to give more credibility to your opinion by declaring yourself more "in-the-know", but your opinion is actually diminished by failing to reveal your source!
So no more in the know, about someone who we all know... ya know?
A correction is inevitable, its all about timing now.
but what sort of a "correction"? does anyone foresee houses crashing to pre 2001 levels for example? Or will they go down by say 40,000 euros and sure its no big deal as they went up so much in the first place that very few will have negative equity
13th September 2006
One small step for rates….one giant leap for repayments
Why some buyers have seen housing costs rise nearly 50% in the past year.
......
I think what we'll see when the market does decline/stall is the increase in the use of the "POA" price tag instead of highlighting a 50k drop.
Thats even starting allready
That is an excellent piece and I have just printed it off to show friends. Thanks for posting it, not sure whether the Mods will allow it to remain though.
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