B
blindjustice
Guest
"GHOST ESTATES" -----------WOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Genuinely scary
Genuinely scary
Interesting that a mortgage provider is pleading for the 2% stress test to be abolished!!!
Regulator to insist on mortgage stress-test requirement
[broken link removed]
Won't somebody please think of the children !
Interesting that a mortgage provider is pleading for the 2% stress test to be abolished!!!
Regulator to insist on mortgage stress-test requirement
[broken link removed]
Sherry Fitz out with figures saying that the market is entering a 'soft landing' phase. They indicate that the figures for Dublin are less than the rest of the country which I thought was remarkable.
Their CEO was interviewed on Morning Ireland trying to allay fears of a slowdown. He didn't sound very convincing. The interviewer pressed him on why one would buy now if stamp duty could be abolished in the future.
http://www.rte.ie/business/2006/1002/houses.html
One point I don't fully understand about the "soft landing" theory is:
why would anyone buy into it now? Yields do not appear to be sufficient relative to costs of the properties, and as there is no capital appreciation, buying in doesn't make sense.
If there are no buyers, then the properties are not worth what they are currently "valued" at - and must fall to a point where the percentage yield is corrected (wherever that might be).
It doesn't make any sense whatsoever for someone to buy now but I can't see them falling to a price where a sensible yield can be derived (~6%) in the short term unless there is a drastic increase in rents which isn't going to happen.
It doesn't make any sense whatsoever for someone to buy now but I can't see them falling to a price where a sensible yield can be derived (~6%) in the short term unless there is a drastic increase in rents which isn't going to happen.
Sherry Fitz out with figures saying that the market is entering a 'soft landing' phase. They indicate that the figures for Dublin are less than the rest of the country which I thought was remarkable.
Their CEO was interviewed on Morning Ireland trying to allay fears of a slowdown. He didn't sound very convincing. The interviewer pressed him on why one would buy now if stamp duty could be abolished in the future.
http://www.rte.ie/business/2006/1002/houses.html
Read it in the Indo this morning. I'll see if I can find a link.
Clip from Indo:
Douglas Newman Good, which will publish a report on house prices today, said prices could fall in the second quarter of next year.
Rival Sherry FitzGerald is not only predicting that growth will continue, but said growth levels next year will be even greater than those experienced at present.
In a report yesterday, Marian Finnegan, chief economist at Sherry FitzGerald, gave a much more upbeat forecast. She said: "The short-term deceleration in the pace of house price inflation is a result of a number of unique market conditions, most especially the current interest rate environment. It is a temporary phenomenon.
There is a article in the current Irish Property Buyer which Marian Finnegan says that now is a good time to buy. Surely she has lost all credibility at this stage.WTF? Interest rates moving to a neutral position is a unique and temporary phenomenon? These people are morons.
DNG are possibly attempting to 'manage' their client's expectations in a slowing market (estate agents make money/ survive on volume). Sherry FitzGerald seem to be 'true believers' they will probably stick to their guns until falling volumes start eating into their bottom line.
In fact, they frequently boast of achieving higher sales prices than any agent in a given area (which begs the question - who would buy from them?). This tactic was probably extraordinarily successful in a booming market but is no doubt killing them since the market started to weaken.