Calina said:I can just see it - 10 years down the line there'll be agents in Poland, Bulgaria, Cape Verde and Croatia selling cheap property in Ireland.
I'm not sure how far down the prices are going to do. I'm not altogether sure that percentage falls are meaningful at the moment as the figure on which they'll be calculated is currently unknown. When I hear "there'll be a 50% drop in property prices" I can't actually visualise that without knowing 50% of what. So I don't want to speculate on percentage falls.
I do think that there is no indication of sanity in the market at the moment. I realise buying a home is an emotional purchase, but it is the choice of home itself should be the emotional bit, not the actual fact of owning anything at all. Why buy something unsuitable - you'll never be at home in it anyway, and if the market shifts negatively which it looks like it probably will, you'll be stuck in it, hating it and unable to move.
And yet I saw one person advising that people buy unsuitable stuff, just so that they have something. I cannot see the sense in it.
Duplex said:Well my guess as to where the support level lies in the market is; when the gross yield achievable reflects all finance and holding costs with a premium, say 2-3% to reflect sector risk. You could construct an equated yield (for analysis purposes) based on the rate achievable on long dated bonds (10 year German Euro) say 3.80% add sector risk say 2.5% = an equated yield of 6.30%. So my stab in the dark is that gross yields will at some stage in the foreseeable future, reach somewhere in the region of 7%.
I love speculating.
ivuernis said:
Isn't there a large number of investor-owned unoccupied/unrented properties (mainly apartments I'd imagine) in Ireland at the present time all banking on capital appreciation.
nah i'd say the floor would be 200k for the average house in dublin which is near 400k so 50% from here and more if they keep rising for next several years.walk2dewater said:Using Duplexs' 7% theory. So about €157,142 for what rents for €1000/mth today (assuming 11 x 1000). I'd add another 20% loss due to the "fear overshoot" at the bottom where nothing shifts, so let's say €125,714 final settling price...
€125,714 for the place I rent. Chr1st I think it's market value is 1/2million minimum. Yikes. 75% fall.
Maybe the future's bright for some, but I don't think gloating at the extent of many people's missfortune is the right attitude either, a lot of people may be badly affected by such a crash, this will run the whole gamut from FTB's, through amateur investors to the big builders (who will be burnt more than most as they are the most leveraged of all). Of course FTB's will get most of or sympathy, but you've also got to spare a thought for the amateur who has remortgaged to buy the investment property.But ultimately the future is bright, i.e. an abundance of CHEAP property in Ireland
No you don't. State how you know the current prices are directly linked to speculative investors!Duplex said:So we have a broad consensus that a speculative bubble exists in the Irish property market?
Duplex said:Would it be controversial to suggest that the price of housing will return to a level supported by fundamentals? For instance what if yields in the investment market rose to say 6 or 7%, still low by historic standards? I believe that such a scenario is highly likely, but the increase in yields will be as a result of falling capital values, rather than inflation in rents.
Howitzer said:This is anecdotal at best. I've rented for quite a while and I've never witnessed the phenomenon of empty, rentable, units. Holiday homes are obviously different.
walk2dewater said:Using Duplexs' 7% theory. So about €157,142 for what rents for €1000/mth today (assuming 11 x 1000). I'd add another 20% loss due to the "fear overshoot" at the bottom where nothing shifts, so let's say €125,714 final settling price...
€125,714 for the place I rent. Chr1st I think it's market value is 1/2million minimum. Yikes. 75% fall.
Please lets not start, which came first, the bubble or the crash thingLoki said:No you don't. State how you know the current prices are directly linked to speculative investors!
I was recently in Rome with my extended family. We spoke about property and I put forward the arguemnt about rent yields being negative on new purchases and for many it is actually cheaper to rent then buy due to prices. I was then reminded that it is how it has been in Italian cities for about 20 years. Italy is the next country to us on the world home ownership level (below by about 10-15%)
Now they live in a 2 bed apartment. The parents are in one room and the children, brother and sister in ther 20s live at home sharing the other bed room as small as a boxroom.
Now if the "fundemnetals" were applied the children would move out right? Now I am not saying Ireland is unique but am I to take it Italy is? I admit I don't know that much about the italian market but I do remember the fact it was cheaper to rent than buy for the majority of the population for a long time and still is apparently. Social housing has something to do with it.
What I have said is not even close to correcting the misuse of language.redo said:Please lets not start, which came first, the bubble or the crash thing
Glenbhoy said:Posted by Walkdewater:
Maybe the future's bright for some, but I don't think gloating at the extent of many people's missfortune is the right attitude either,
Duplex said:They would fall by about 40-50% if my theory is valid.
.
Agreed, but let not go there anyway.Loki said:What I have said is not even close to correcting the misuse of language.
Increased demand has an upward pressure on prices. However, it it not SOLEY. I agreeLoki said:How do people know that the house prices are high soley because of speculative purcashing?
16:36 - 29 March 2006 - A decline in real estate prices was recorded in Croatia last year in almost all districts as the decline reached as much as 50% in the city of Split, Croatia Today reports.
redo said:Agreed, but let not go there anyway.
Increased demand has an upward pressure on prices. However, it it not SOLEY. I agree
SteelBlue05 said:You need to account for different levels of house prices e.g. a house valued today at 300k is not going to decrease to 150k as you need to account for re-build costs and peoples affordability levels.
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