Quote from said forum: "As for the property crash - it ain't gonna happen. Property prices will stablise, thats its, they won't crash. Any economist will tell you that."anseo said:After reading the "buying property in Dublin - anyone scared of a crash " all I can say is God help us.
anseo said:If you're looking for a more intellectual debate, try the Irish Wimmin's forum:
After reading the "buying property in Dublin - anyone scared of a crash " all I can say is God help us.
Women are a bit mad aren't they!
ivuernis said:I don't think we'll require those kind of rates to alter the mentality here. I think we're beginning to see it already. 9% would certainly see the market go Japanese but sentiment would turn with half those rates IMHO.
walk2dewater said:A nice put or short on a basket of Irish banks would be nice.
Remix said:The ISEQ financials seem oblivious to the emerging situation
Big 4 at 18.34/14.10/11.58/18.55
Time for shorts ?
Remix said:I suggested this a few weeks back (end of June):
Wish I'd taken my own advice as the Big 4 are now DOWN
-4%
-6%
-5.8%
-6.7%
Since that post !
ivuernis said:I agree it's not just rates which are a factor in this, and many other indicators at the moment point to the possibility of problems ahead especially for the US economy.
I knew the yield curve had been flat for some about 6 months now, was it just June that it inverted?
p.s. UK inflation jumped too this month, possibly interest rate rise on the card in the UK again.
I don't see dramatic falls on the card anytime soon either even with rates rising faster than anticipated but neither can I envisage the property bull continuing for another 2 years, certainly not at anything approaching double digits.walk2dewater said:On the contrary, the odds of dramatic price falls this summer flowing into Autumn are less than the odds that prices go on a massive 2 year run.
anseo said:If you're looking for a more intellectual debate, try the Irish Wimmin's forum:
After reading the "buying property in Dublin - anyone scared of a crash " all I can say is God help us.
Women are a bit mad aren't they!
bearishbull said:From ivenus
" I don't think you can lose in Dublin the population is growing and there aint enough housing, I bought in an up and coming area in dublin 14mths ago and now I couldn't afford my own place if I were to try and buy it now. I feel sorry for people who haven't bought yet! Best thing I ever did was buy Cavan because from that I got the deposit for Dublin by remortgaging! So if people can't afford Dublin but can afford elsewhere I'd say to do it just to get on the ladder!"
Aint enough housing in dublin? Thats why rents are no higher than 6 years ago!! Oh i'd say theres great demand for rental properties in the economic capital of ireland -Cavan! These are the sort of "investors" buying and inflating market with zero regard for rental yields or sustainability and are in for a rude awakening
Becoming more like Glengary Glenross every day. The EA's looking for "leads".phoenix_n said:...got a voice message from an established EA on the northside wanting to know if i was still looking for property.
never got that before!
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