Why is yield in Germany 6 or 7%? Easy. Because prices have fallen over 1% a year for the last 10 years or more. That'll put up the rental yield for you. Prices fell because of many factors, the most significant of which IMO is demographics. As the population falls more buildings become empty, no matter how the overall economy does. So your fund in German property may do well on yield, but I wouldn't like to depend on getting my capital back again!
So your fund in German property may do well on yield, but I wouldn't like to depend on getting my capital back again!
Drops in asking prices have very little relevance. When you can show drops in SALE AGREED prices relative to other houses in the area that have already sold, then you have evidence to back up your argument of falling sentiment.
Just for a laugh, take a look at this diagram
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/ma...d=242&sSheet=/money/2006/06/19/ixcitytop.html
Ireland is not the worst by a long shot!
Btw, don't want to come across as jibing or provoking, I am genuinely interested in where you think the "wise" money is going..
Firefly
This is typical property investment ignorance!
What happened BEFORE does not matter.
What matters is what will happen in the FUTURE.
Why would I need 6% on my German rent to match 3% on my Irish rent (as an investor)?
At last! Someone rising to the challenge of reviewing what the professionals say - good post Auerfa if I may!
More comments on OECD later (am supposed to be working!).
Why is yield in Germany 6 or 7%? Easy. Because prices have fallen over 1% a year for the last 10 years or more. That'll put up the rental yield for you. Prices fell because of many factors, the most significant of which IMO is demographics. As the population falls more buildings become empty, no matter how the overall economy does. So your fund in German property may do well on yield, but I wouldn't like to depend on getting my capital back again!
To all those in the bear cave...if you're right and property crashes in the coming months, this will have wide reprocussions for the entire economy with almost all affected....what are you planning to do? i've heard some saying that they'd leave etc...if you're so sure it's gonna happen why are you waiting around? For those hoping to snap up a cheap property...you'll be joining a long queue. We can all give aruguments for/against a crash till the proverbial cows come home, but what are you doing about it??
Btw, don't want to come across as jibing or provoking, I am genuinely interested in where you think the "wise" money is going..
Firefly
To all those in the bear cave...if you're right and property crashes in the coming months, this will have wide reprocussions for the entire economy with almost all affected....what are you planning to do? i've heard some saying that they'd leave etc...if you're so sure it's gonna happen why are you waiting around?
Shocking! The guy is about to invest 10 or 100's K in a market and you claim it doesn't matter what happend "before".
"typical property investment ignorance"
Well thats called risk which i am fully aware of. In fact i am actually counting on capital apprecation and the yield is the worst case sceanario.
Buy low. Sell high.
To be honest i am no financial advisor or guru. But what i am doing is following the smart money.
Besides..
0% chance of property crash in Germany. Now its only an article but......thats pretty low.
To all those in the bear cave...if you're right and property crashes in the coming months, this will have wide reprocussions for the entire economy with almost all affected....what are you planning to do?
i've heard some saying that they'd leave etc...if you're so sure it's gonna happen why are you waiting around?
For those hoping to snap up a cheap property...you'll be joining a long queue.
What happened before the dot com bubble burst?
People got VERY VERY rich investing in dot coms.
When it burst...people that invested LATE to dot coms got badly burnt.
What happened before to an investment is no indicator of what will happen to it in the future.
From RTE's website today:
"Recent increases in interest rates rises pushed up mortgage repayments. Higher energy prices also had a significant impact last month, increasing the cost of petrol and home heating oil."
http://www.rte.ie/business/2006/0810/inflation.html
Mortgage repayments are a major component of increasing inflation.
Avoid inflation - don't get a mortgage
The SFA said there were stark differences between inflation in the services sector at 6.4%, while in the traded goods sector it was running at 1.7%.
IIf this prediction is incorrect, then my optimistic outlook for Irish property is misplaced.
I think what you mean is that past performance is not a guarantee of future returns.
Billions of smart money has already gone to Germany but prices haven't budged ...
...Don't buy it just because it looks cheap relative to Ireland.
Trends I see in Ireland is increasing population, pro-investment taxation policies, focus on the knowledge economy. If this prediction is incorrect, then my optimistic outlook for Irish property is misplaced.
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