G
2Pack said:Munich also has a stonkingly good public transport system so your two adult FTB unit do not 'need' to live out the back of Ballivor and run 2 cars either, they can move to Starnberg or Passau or somewhere.
If they did live out the back of Ballivor there would be a fabulous S-Bahn service nearby. It goes out about 30 miles from the centre. Dublin is a bloated mess with feck all proper public transport. Its about 3 times the physical size of Munich with the same population. Each U-Bahn and S-Bahn train line would have to be 3 Times Longer on Average to cover the same number of people .
Thats why I consider that Dublin works ONLY as a walking city (D1/D2/D8) and if its too long to walk its not a proposition for me at allMunich is also a lot safer and has a lot less street scumbaggery which explains why the elders move back into town while we gate them in instead.
All in all its a hell of a lot better than the mindless semi d sprawl that is the entire Pale nowadays.
phoenix_n said:ur gonna get the thread locked by going off topic !
Actually Afuera, talk of 50 year mortgages is a complete red herring. When you enter into repayments over such a long period of time, good old mathematics kicks in and the monthly repayments (i.e. the 'new affordability') are actually not much different from smaller repayment periods.Afuera said:I think it's around this time that we'll see 40 and 50 year mortgages being launched on the market as an attempt to address the afforability wall being reached.
Raskolnikov said:More sensationalist tosh from the Indo, a 1/4% interest hike will put the squeeze on mortgage holders, but certainly won't "cripple" them like the Indo is suggesting. It took interest rates to rise to over 4% in the UK before the skids were put on the market there. 3% in the scheme of things, is still reasonable.
I'm laughing at the comparison of Dublin with Vienna, Rotterdam, Helsinki, Copenhagen. A population comparison is certainly valid, but in terms of cultural sophistication and taste we are still muck-savages (just take a look at Dublin, Galway, Cork on a typical Saturday night and you'll get a flavour for the kind of 'culture' of the neuve riche).Persius said:Now based on these sort of comparissons I think you can make some sort of judgement on the relative value in Dublin property. However I think cities like Vienna, Rotterdam, Helsinki, Copenhagen would make for better comparissons with Dublin (or the same countries for Ireland).
soma said:Actually Afuera, talk of 50 year mortgages is a complete red herring. When you enter into repayments over such a long period of time, good old mathematics kicks in and the monthly repayments (i.e. the 'new affordability') are actually not much different from smaller repayment periods.
Example
€250k over 35 years @5.0% : €1262/mth
€250k over 50 years @5.0% : €1135/mth
There is essentially no difference in 'affordability'.
liteweight said:To my mind I'd buy because if a FTB is stretched now, and prices continue to rise, then all hope of buying is gone. Most people do not buy their first home with a view to investment..they buy it to live and raise a family in. Therefore, they are talking about staying put for 5 yrs. or more. Who knows what will happen in the market during that time?
liteweight said:To my mind I'd buy because if a FTB is stretched now, and prices continue to rise, then all hope of buying is gone. Most people do not buy their first home with a view to investment..they buy it to live and raise a family in. Therefore, they are talking about staying put for 5 yrs. or more. Who knows what will happen in the market during that time?
True; but 4.75% on a sum is A LOT more than 3% on the same sum even if the percentage increase is less as in the case you pointed out.Howitzer said:Your analysis of the UK market reaction to interest rates is incorrect. It did indeed take rates to go over 4% in the UK to put the skids on property price increases but the starting point was 3.5%. Rates went from a bottom of 3.5% in Nov 03 to a peak of 4.75% in Aug 04. This was only a 1.25% increase and as relative measure was only a 30% increase in interest rates.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5240770.stm
By the end of today we'll have gone from 2% in Nov 05 to 3% in Aug 06. A 1% increase or 33% increase in interest rates.
I'd have to laugh at thatRaskolnikov said:The point I'm trying to make is that it's going to take more than a 1/4% increase in rates before it makes a difference to house prices. This isn't just my opinion, it's the opinion of Dan McLaughlin of the BOI too, who we grudgingly have to admit, is usually right in his forecasts.
whathome said:Bank of England have raised rates by .25% to 4.75%
ECB is next!
Calina said:This is where you are wrong. This is what people *want* to do. Unfortunately, certainly in Dublin, a lot of people are not buying their first home with a view to raise their family in. It's because a) you can't raise a family effectively in a one or two bedroomed apartment and b) you can't afford a three bedroomed apartment unless you are earning far, far in excess of the average salary. The primary reason why I will not buy is because about the only thing I can afford within 30 minutes drive of work is a onebedroomed box.
Personally, under the circumstances between the risk of prices going up versus the risk of prices going down, I'd prefer to rent a reasonably decent place with some modicum of space in the short term because on balance, given the average ratio of salary to final house price in this country, I can't see the current gravy train lasting indefinitely. Yes it's a risk, but it's no more of a risk than possibly getting priced out of the market and there is some evidence to suggest that it may be less of a risk.
Such people have probably been reading too many estate agent brochures (indeed the Irish Times property section!)...walk2dewater said:"Prices go up in the long term", "rent is dead money", "safe as houses", "can't raise a family in a rented home", "prices can't crash where will people live", BUY NOW or "all hope of buying is gone"
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