CelloPoint
Registered User
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room305 said:Property is sticky on the way down, as people are very reluctant to come down in price. Regardless of what they paid for the house.
whathome said:I wonder what the general response on an RTE equivalent would be?
I have no idea, it really depends on what they do in the interim.CelloPoint said:- how many of these people queueing up to buy houses for 400k in the back of Balivor do you think will be living in spanish villas in 10 years' timI
I started riding the wave in 2001 and have indeed made a 'killing' even though its only 2006. Really depends on what you did with the wealth![/quote]CelloPoint said:There's no doubt that anyone who rode the property wave from the mid 90s has made a killing and done very well, but we're living in 2006 now,
CelloPoint said:and I think pretty much everyone in here agrees that you'd be a fool to sign up to a 40 year mortgage and put all your savings into stamp duty for a crappy location property with no services.
CelloPoint said:If we were to see a thread like this back in 1995 and 'listened to the likes of' us, you'd be right. (Again the mantra, "sure if I listened to you lot, I'd still be renting"). But do you really believe that all these 20 something people living in Co. Meath will be sipping cocktails from their villas? The market has changed massively in 10 years.
CelloPoint said:The amatuer investor believes this to be the case. But for the more astute investor, he'll recognise a road to nowhere and bail out regardless.
liteweight said:And yes..I do go off to my villa in Spain and didn't manage to acquire any of my properties through dull, repetitive thinking.
liteweight said:In the immortal words of Billy Connolly "Don't pity me....I'm f****** loaded!!!! If I'd listened to the likes of you God knows where I'd be!! As for 'dogma' why not try reading back through your own posts!!!
tiger said:there is very little risk for the developers and they can turn off the tap
Duplex said:Its worth remembering that this rate tightening cycle is a global phenomenon. The worlds central banks are taking away the punch bowl just as the party gets into full swing, hardly unprecedented however.
So whatever happens to sentiment in the Irish housing market it will happen against the backdrop of a slowing/contracting global economy.
sonar said:Today alone we've had interest rate hikes from
The Danish National Bank
Bank of Slovenia
South African Reserve Bank
Bank Of England
and last but by no means least the ECB.
walk2dewater said:But will they lose their nerve when all this hiking threatens recession? THAT is the real question... stagflation may be the muddle through scenario that appeals the most... rates set just perfectly so as to stem inflation, but not cause a whooping recession... can it be pulled off?
Either way asset bubbles everywhere (consumer, tech stocks and property) are going to get pole-axed from both sides...
gidxl03 said:Too many bears on this thread for a fair balanced argument!
Some more bullish thoughts on why the sky is unlikely to fall down just yet;
[1] Investors who want to realise their profit are interested in their nett return. If when they buy high, even if the price drops in the mean time, it will eventually recover. Therefore, by buying high, they are ensuring that they pay less Capital Gains Tax when they do eventually sell. The current CGT rate is 20%. It may return to 40% when times get hard. The CGT factor should not be dismissed lightly.
[2] Where to invest the money after selling? With peak oil arriving any time soon, the general stock market may be hit hard as economies stop expanding and start to shrink instead. Gold may will be a good bet, but how many people will be willing to buy 100K's of it?
[3] See the plateau (soft landing) of house prices in the UK during the last 12 months. http://www.housepricecrash.co.uk It can happen!
gidxl03 said:[3] See the plateau (soft landing) of house prices in the UK during the last 12 months. http://www.housepricecrash.co.uk It can happen!
gidxl03 said:Therefore, by buying high, they are ensuring that they pay less Capital Gains Tax when they do eventually sell.
gidxl03 said:So 'whathome', say I have 600K to invest after selling property bought in 1996. What do you suggest I do with this cash to protect it from inflation?
WHAT IF for example the US solves its debt problem by creating trillions of FIAT dollars (thereby devaluing China's foreign exchange of 1 trillion USD)and our friends at the ECB want to keep the euro pegged with the dollar. ECB will need to reduce interest rates and so property will continue to rise sharply while my 600K in a Bond is worth less and less every day (and the government tax it!).
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