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thewatcher said:But as someone else said earlier in the thread more than likely these are cherry picked "safe" mortgages (low Ltv) as international investors are not stupid,leaving the bank with the much riskier one's 100%,interest only etc.
phoenix_n said:I
I would not be concerned with that as eventually traffic will be mostly banned from alot of the areas (can be fixed in a day with a council ruling)
Recent measurements show that the Gulf Stream has already weakened and if it does not recover temps in Northwest Europe could drop by 1C over the next decade. If the Gulf Stream were to switch off completely temps would drop by between 4C and 6C within 20yrs of such an event. It's entirely plausible that within lifetime of most people alive today.phoenix_n said:You may mock at my predictions but do not underestimate what a degree change in temperatures can make. Someone else mentioned traffic etc in salthill. I would not be concerned with that as eventually traffic will be mostly banned from alot of the areas (can be fixed in a day with a council ruling) and the views and the sea will never change.(in our lifetime anyhow)
walk2dewater said:Property prices are going UP UP UP.....
We're a while off a 'buyers' market yet.. but it is inevitable... and I [puffs chest out with Irish pride] wouldnt want to live here when it does...
walk2dewater said:Property prices are going UP UP UP.....
We're a while off a 'buyers' market yet.. but it is inevitable... and I [puffs chest out with Irish pride] wouldnt want to live here when it does...
room305 said:I dunno, maybe living here when the whole thing collapses won't be so bad. Assuming your job won't be affected and you don't have a large mortgage hanging over your head, what will the problem be?
thewatcher said:THE IRISH !
I'd say the rest of europe are laughing their asses off at us !.
CelloPoint said:touching on 45,000 hits in less than one month.
phoenix_n said:Wasnt it over 39 thousand yesterday ? No way. Could it really have risen by 6,000 in 24 hrs.
room305 said:I dunno, maybe living here when the whole thing collapses won't be so bad. Assuming your job won't be affected and you don't have a large mortgage hanging over your head, what will the problem be?
Probably snap yourself up a nice repossessed motor on the cheap too.
SteelBlue05 said:That isnt really a huge amount. Each person may view the pages 10 times in a day, so 600 people may have read it, and there are a lot of users on this site. Plus we dont know exactly how the "views" are calculated, if you open a thread, then submit a new response, and then view it again then is that 1 "view" or 3 "views".
phoenix_n said:If you mean that it will be cheap to buy. Yes. But the trick will be to know that you dont buy when the market has only hit a crevice , on the way to rock bottom. Maybe that might be a thread one day. 'Has the market hit rock bottom yet'.
Maybe because some people dont live their lives obsessed with money. If they have a job in a sector that is reasonably secure and can afford to own their own home, then why should they care?CelloPoint said:Why any young person or immigrant would stay in Ireland in the event of an economic crash is beyond me, let alone to want to commit to a mortgage in a gloomy economy.
CelloPoint said:Can we plesae stop about the gulf stream? If this kind of talk continues, the mod will shut this thread for going off topic. The previous record on AAM was 48,000 hits over 8 months. This thread is now touching on 45,000 hits in less than one month.
CelloPoint said:Nowhere has anyone actually stated that 45,000 individual people have viewed this thread - I think everyone aware of the multiple hits factor. It's worth pointing that out, I agree.
Still, the stats are very impressive I have to say.
CelloPoint said:What makes you so sure you will be able to get a generous mortgage under such economic conditions? I don't own a house and have no intention of buying one in a crashed market just cos it's cheap. I save lots of money by renting and investing the difference. People say to me "but you can't live in equities" and I say to them "you can't live in Rathoath/Adamstown/Balbriggan either" (because I would have to sit in traffic for 2 hours a day to get to work). My savings will be leaving this country. I've a good job in the tech sector at the moment which looks reasonably secure for the short to medium term. A lot depends on the Irish economy. If anything, an economic crash may even be a good thing as it would drive our costs down - the sooner this happens, the better. It may just be too late - the market should have been reigned in years ago.
Why any young person or immigrant would stay in Ireland in the event of an economic crash is beyond me, let alone to want to commit to a mortgage in a gloomy economy.
room305 said:I dunno, maybe living here when the whole thing collapses won't be so bad. Assuming your job won't be affected and you don't have a large mortgage hanging over your head, what will the problem be?
If you had a reasonable job and no debts then sure it would be as goodroom305 said:I am just genuinely wondering if it would be bad to live here during a crash if I was in secure employment and renting.
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