bearishbull
Registered User
- Messages
- 207
bearishbull said:5.5% to 6.6% on a repayment mortgage(30year) only adds 12% to monthly repayment.
Apsil said:If you took all of this advice to heart you would have lost out on huge property growth in Ireland
Apsil said:Does anyone have any bullish comments on any actual investments, apart from a 3% return in a deposit account? Stocks? Overseas properties? Commodities? Dare I say it, Irish property?!!
Apsil said:I realise that prudence is key, but you have to take a risk on something or you're never going to make money on anything.
edo said:Interesting: What will happen to our sprawling car dependent suburbs in the most oil dependent , indebted economy in Western Europe?
gravitygirl said:In fairness, one is a house and the other is an apartment, but i do take your point. however you can't just make straight comparisons like that without taking into account other variables i.e. average earnings per capita and average mortgage repayments as a percentage of average earnings (which is a better guide to affordability than house prices alone).
gravitygirl said:In fairness, one is a house and the other is an apartment, but i do take your point. however you can't just make straight comparisons like that without taking into account other variables i.e. average earnings per capita and average mortgage repayments as a percentage of average earnings (which is a better guide to affordability than house prices alone).
bearishbull said:ah but irelands different .we cant be compared to wealthier, economically powerful and sustainable locations with much better infrastructure cos we're the best little country in the world.
“At another smaller project, the Abbey, a former parish building on East 16th Street being converted to condominiums, one apartment, a duplex on the top two floors, sold at a discount of $500,000, or about 27 percent below the asking price. Eight of 31 apartments are still listed as available.”
Recent FTB buyersDuplex said:Bidding wars are possibly history for large swathes of the market, negative equity may be a reality (if unidentified) for many recent buyers.
Apsil said:I realise that prudence is key, but you have to take a risk on something or you're never going to make money on anything. Check out the various forums at the moment and the best advice you will get is stick all your money in Northern Rock! I thought property investment was about long-term returns? If so, what's the big problem with investing now? (ok, ok, yields - but yields have been a problem for years).
redo said:Recent FTB buyers
bearishbull said:Shock horror the new york apartment has a rental yield of around 6%, thats a bit old fashioned aint it! despite a massive house price boom there you can still get a 6% yield on a desirable manhattan property not far from central park, im sure many in ireland would rather a D4 apartment yielding 2% and the high taxes relative to america.
Agreed, well spottedAfuera said:Surely the LTV figure would determine how much risk a buyer is of falling into negative equity? Whether it's a FTB or a STB if they still have to pay back 90% of their mortgage and there's a drop of 10% then they start to head into negative equity territory...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?