yawha said:In most of europe its perfectly natural to rent,if your outlook on life is conditioned by your immediate surrounding then I think you need to broaden your horizons.
What dont FTB deserve?Nobody is physicaly forcing them to do anything,dont believe the hype or the media, they're out to make money ,not do you favours.
House prices keep rising because people keep buying them,if people did their homework and worked out whether houses were good value or not, using facts ,statistics,history,comparisons and basic common sense they would have stopped buying them a long time ago,the're not doing this and been driven by fear(of their own ignorance),this is foolishness en masse.
There is no external,mystical,uncontrollable force driving house prices up,its not like the weather.
You and everybody else's attitude and consequential action affects what happens.
I dont own my own house,I did but now rent,I didnt buy to make money, I have since cashed in and I feel very secure about my decision and I am financially better off.
Zack said:...having said that, its somewhat easier to pack your bags, get on a plane and earn your living elsewhere when you're not chained to the old bricks and mortar.
walk2dewater said:This will be the last hurrah, then I’m going to starting betting seriously against this bubble.
room305 said:Once silly season kicks in again in earnest I shall be selling. I'd prefer to get out before the top than either try and time the top or deal with the aftermath.
Are they FTB type properties?whathome said:We're selling two properties and there is no sign of a small army of aggressive buyers, quite the opposite. We were sale agreed on one of the houses we're selling but the buyer got cold feet and backed out. Now an identical house has gone up in the same estate with an asking price €30k less than ours. I really don't think any "UP UP UP" situation will occur in the near term, sentiment has changed - maybe not a lot but enough to tip the balance.
The effect either way on me is neutral as we're selling and buying roughly equal values but right now it looks like buying is becoming easier than selling if you're brave enough and have the money! If I could avoid it, there's no way I would buy any property until values return to reasonable levels based on rental yield, price/earnings etc. Unfortunately I can’t avoid buying so selling to buy rather than holding existing properties and buying is as good as it gets.
redo said:Are they FTB type properties?
CelloPoint said:Can I ask how you heard about this thread? Are you a new askaboutmoney user? The reason I ask is because this thread has received a phenomenal amount of hits over the last 3 weeks.
I was talking to a colleague at lunch and I overheard the people at the table next to me talking about this thread!
It's not to free up captial, but to improve the return on capital.bearishbull said:... They say its to free up capital to lend more but in reality it would free up limited capital relative to the amount they already lend,...
bearishbull said:Suburban branches will have a valuation of €5-€8 million and should show returns of around 3 per cent for investors.
AIB's most valuable Dublin branch at Grafton Street also has frontage on to Wicklow Street and would be expected to sell for a yield of 2-2.25 per cent. Depending on the rent the bank is prepared to pay, this branch alone could be worth at least €35 million.
whatever they claim i think its smoke and mirrors,the big two banks are clamouring to sell their prime real estate which they have never done in the past. they have no problem lending at present,maybe they want to make their accounts look better but financial institutions dont sell prize assets that are set to increase substantially,only conclusion i can draw is they dont expect substantial increase over next ten+ yearstiger said:It's not to free up captial, but to improve the return on capital.
Yes they can borrow from the central bank, but they need to have adequate Tier 1 & 2 capital (have a look at Capital adequacy)
A branch is worth, say €2M. It's equivalent rental income is only 2-3% of this. Through their normal business they expect to be able to generate more than this.
bearishbull said:only conclusion i can draw is they dont expect substantial increase over next ten+ years
The fact they are continuing to rent the properties tells you they dont intend shutting many branches anytime soon, if closing branches is planned down the road they could always sell the assets when the time comes to close branches down and get any capital appreciation between now and then but they chose not to and would rather rent than hold onto prime real estate! they a)dont expect rents to rise significantly(or else they wouldnt be as eager to sell and rent) and b)they dont think the capital appreciation prospects are good enough to hold onto them, i can see the banks buying back their properties at knock down rates in years to come.tiger said:Would tend to agree with this, if the banks are selling property then you have to think they believe its at or close to the top of the cycle.
On the other hand there might be another objective here. Banks are trying to move customers away from the counter and towards online. They've already closed several city center branches, it'll be easier to close these others in 10-15 yrs time when they come up for rent reviews.
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