Yeah, but "production" isn't going to remain at 90,000 units a year. An increase of 1.2 million people is a fair old increase. If they are immigrants, a lot will rent surely?
Morning!
Interesting that NCB predict our population will grow by 30% to 5.3 million by 2020...should keep demand stoked up
Pie in the sky stuff,they just extrapolated out current trends like things were never going to change,a useless report really. Does anybody think the party will go on indefinitely ?
So anything that suggests the end is not nigh and there will be a soft landing is self-serving pie in the sky stuff with an agenda?
Eh,what the hell does a guestimate and that's all it is, that the population will be 5.3 million in 14 years time have to do with a Crash v soft landing senario now !.you clutching at straws big time now
Of course there is, I sold a house a few weeks ago, and then bought one
Nobody said the market was dead, it's just not doing very well.
I thought you were one of the main bears here..........
So we can conclude that in some circumstances it's a good time to buy, but not rush in blindly on the basis of 'ah sure jeysus the property always goes up.........'
We're still some way off a crash once people stand back and have a look at all this. There are more reasons to buying property than from a pure investment point of view. There are always a certain number of ftb's out there willing to dive in.
Thats a growth of only 2% year on year. Including domestic birth rate of 50,000 pa.
I thought you were one of the main bears here..........
Unfortunately for the property market, the population growth will not be in the home buying age profile. Take a look at the demographic disaster coming up for the Irish property market:
[broken link removed]
Good man Arthur...that's the spirit!
There'll be a crash for the buffoons buying left right and centre but for the discerning punter...let the good times roll on!
Unfortunately for the property market, the population growth will not be in the home buying age profile. Take a look at the demographic disaster coming up for the Irish property market:
[broken link removed]
Having put our house on the market over last weekend, first viewing was last night and we have an asking price offer, with further viewings organised for next week. The asking price is set about €15k higher than we'd have put it on at in February (now @ €395k).
Looks like our target market isn't too bear-ish, but that could be quite location specific.
perfect
....still waiting on partisan to explain what he was on about, it sounds like he thinks that taking risks is a recipe for "financial greatness"?
With property in Ireland currently overvalued by any fundamental measure, taking a risk on purchasing an investment property is a recipe for financial disappointment IMO.
The NCB were proposing a scenario. It's not a forecast or prediction because no economist would pretend to have any idea as to what will happen beyond a 5 year horizon (apart from any group who have an interest in selling property portfolios)