gidxl03 said:'bearishbull' your prediction may of course be true. However Q2 2006 shows a fairly sustainable increase of about 4 to 5% and so small IR increases of 0.5% will not be enough to cause a major upset.
- UK pop is ~15 times ours, but they are building only 2x as many houses
- average HP/Salary is about 8
- very high immigration levels
walk2dewater said:Sounds like you were lucky, right time, right place. Unlike the current crop of FTBs who are subsidising the early retirement lifestyles of their elders via the property pyramid.
Invest it in well diversified funds , over the long run equities outperform all asset classes, companies will always exist and make profits despite challenges like inflation and "peak oil".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!).
bearishbull said:Invest it in well diversified funds , over the long run equities outperform all asset classes, companies will always exist and make profits despite challenges like inflation and "peak oil".
gidxl03 said:'whathome', post 1161 is out of context! The context is: an investor who is thinking about selling: forgoing 50K a year of easy money and 12K in rent to instead pay 1% to an auctioneer, an few K to get house painted & decorated, hassle of selling furniture. And, after having timed the market, buy in again and pay stamp duty of about 7%, more solicitors etc.
And after all that you don't have an answer to what to do with the money. Perhaps now you see the other side of the fence !
liteweight said:Luck had nothing to do with it and the time span is 20 years planning to retire early.
liteweight said:However, I have always been of the opinion that a house is only worth what someone is willing to pay for it .
liteweight said:Even if house prices/rental incomes fall, it won't mean that investors sell wholesale. If that was the case, why haven't they been selling in droves over the last couple of years when rental income has dropped significantly? Capital gain alone, is only worth it if you can afford to pay the mortgage.
liteweight said:I have and always will look after my own retirement and lifestyle and don't believe for one minute that it's at anyone else's expense.
gidxl03 said:[whathome] One thing I can say for sure, it's never easy to "just by low". E.g. when in 1996 I invested heavily, people told me I was stark raving mad. Only in hindsight was it wise. The gain is much greater than I expected so I do count myself lucky (but fully realise that it is still only on paper!)
gidxl03 said:The question about what to do with the money is intrinsically linked to the thread topic of propery sentiment. There are many amature investors who got lucky and just don't know how to invest the profit. E.g. The Black monday crashes (25% in one day). You need to convince amature investors like me that the stock market will be a better bet in the long run.
Its only $40k per citizen ,hardly armagedon stuff. lets try keep on topic folks.Duplex said:Just thinking about what the Americans will do to address their deficits that stand at about $12 trillion. They may seek to monetarise the debt, (print more dollars) but this will cause hyper inflation, the possible collapse of the dollar and the end of America as the soul superpower. Talk about a rock and a hard place.
http://bethemedia.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/deficits.jpg
Nice chart tracking the deficit from the 1960's.
walk2dewater said:Irish people by and large are totally ignorant about investing. We don't learn it in school, and its not passed down from family. Sorry, that's the grim reality and it's a shame. Until we learn how, and are motivated and encouraged to, obtain, grow and preserve wealth we are destined to remain at the mercy of those that do.
whathome said:RTE News at 6pm and 9pm had well balanced reports on the ECB rise today. Lots of warnings about increasing debt and the squeeze on recent home buyers. These reports really do affect sentiment IMO.
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