It not in our interest for property prices to keep rising, and certainly not in our interest for there to be a crash. All in all a few interest rate rises are good news provided they stop say early/mid next year.
If it goes to that, we are all screwed. .
but its very unlikely thanks to the ECB being too big for currency speculators to really take on. NZ doesnt have that luxury...
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no, your way to early on this.
markets don't plummet, they yo-yo up or down to a new plateau..the less liquid, the longer it takes.
not a swallow does a summer make...time left for fools still to be aprted from their money...
the mentallity still exists that property doesn't drop, not in Ireland.
Why not rent? Sounds like the perfect choice while you wait to see what happens with the property market.Currently living in the U.K and planning to move back to Ireland to start a family. Houses prices are a huge concern as when I look at what I'll have to pay out in repayments its mind boggling. What about when the kids come along?
...
So I think there is a real need for concern about the future, we need to be looking at the -long term-BIG picture.
So you tried to bate us with the 1999 article and it didn't work... and you think it's funny that people have a clear indication of where interest rates are heading. Do you think you are more clever than the majority of people posting here? Do you think we're stupid enough to fall for such a lame trick? Such a pathetic attempt to make a point degrades anything else you have to say.
I'm not. And anyone with a pile of cash ain't either. Bring on higher rates I say. Higher the better cos with inflation at 5% and rabobank only paying 3.6% before DIRT I'm getting poorer.
Sez who? Sez the bank, sez the estate agent? Just because every vested interest in Ireland says it over and over and over ad nauseum don't make it true. Why lo and behold, HOKs "Research" in todays IT says that another 1% increase is the worst case (top right on page5). No, that aint the worse case at all.
Im not saying that just because some smart guys predicted a crash in ’99 and some smart guys are doing the same now that it WONT happen, all I’m saying is they are just predictions.
1) it is not in our interest for property prices to keep rising
2) it is not in our interest for there to be a crash
Unfortunately
3) it is not in our interest for property prices to remain at the levels they are at the moment given the disparity between salaries and average prices. For some (any) sort of rationality to come into the market, either salaries will have to rise quite a bit or houseprices will have to come down. Current social partnership talks about something like 10% in 27 months and most private sector employees are claiming they won't even see that. So...hmm...
So what's it to be? Thing is, if property prices are going to remain at current levels, something like 40% of the buyers are going to dry up so...
I think that means many houses, fewer buyers, supply, demand, prices heading down?
I'd venture to say that what's not in our interest is a long drawn out correction. A sharp shock and life as normal...but I can't see it happening. Not with so many people trying to convince themselves that everything is alright.
Yeah there is, its called trolling.Well, there was nothing wrong with an attempt to bait people,
Actually you would have been right in 1999, or close anyway. If interest rates hadn't been floored in 2001, the price rises would have deflated and things would have returned more or less to equilibrium. The thing is now that even if interest rates collapse again, for some unknown reason, the house value to salary rates is too far off the scale to support further increases. And interest rates aren't going to drop again, short of another 9-11 scale attack. And even then I would have my doubts.Far from considering myself smarter that people on the forum, excluding your good self of course, events since 1999 proved me particularly poor in predicting the future.
Being one of the richest countries in the world, apparently, and still not being a net EU contributor will not have endeared us to Brussels any. They won't be doing us any favours to pull our fat out of the fire this time around, EU member or not.Maybe a long drawn out correction allowing for inflation to bring property back would be better for Ireland as its part of the EU?
€380 for a 500sq ft studio flat in Frankfurt.
€750 for a (what looks smaller) studio in Dublin.
http://www.daft.ie/searchrental.daft?search=rental&id=420054
I like that studio in Dublin, you fall out of bed and are in the kitchen, perfect if you have an attack of the midnight munchies.
I went with the argument that prices had peaked in 99 and didn’t invest in a BTL. So I’m not that smart.
A neutral ECB rates is generally agreed to be 4%, so mortgages (ECB + say 1%) should be somewhere between 3% and say 6%. So if property in Ireland is valued correctly, an increase of 1% should be a pain for people but shouldnt be a cause for sleepless nights for 99% of mortgage holders... The fact that a .25% increase is billed as a hike says enough
Could it be because there aren't any valid bull arguments?Is it just me, or do bull arguments seem very flimsy and not really based on any actual economic knowledge or knowledge of global trends, or how various institutions actually work, just pure sentiment?
Is it just me, or do bull arguments seem very flimsy and not really based on any actual economic knowledge or knowledge of global trends, or how various institutions actually work, just pure sentiment?
Is it just me, or do bull arguments seem very flimsy and not really based on any actual economic knowledge or knowledge of global trends, or how various institutions actually work, just pure sentiment?
As a lifelong IT reader, this kind of EA puke that's turning up all too often within the pages is starting to turn me off it. If it wasn't for Tom Humphries...
Being one of the richest countries in the world, apparently, and still not being a net EU contributor will not have endeared us to Brussels any. They won't be doing us any favours to pull our fat out of the fire this time around, EU member or not.
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