Below is a summing up comment from S&P rating agency in a report earlier this month on European Housing Markets.
There is no reason to expect the Irish housing market to move from a soft landing into a real downturn, however. For one thing, rents have been steadily increasing in the past two years, providing support to the buy-to-let segment of the market. More broadly, the economy is still growing at a robust pace (5.2% in 2007, after 5.8% in 2006). After more than 10 years of exceptional growth, Ireland's housing market is simply maturing.
Not saying they are right but thought I would throw in a "neutral" view. Pretty much what Jim Power had to say last night.
Central Bank just revised 2007 GNP growth forecast down from 5.75% to 4.75%.
http://www.rte.ie/business/2007/0418/economy.html
S&P and other ratings agencies have been caught out big time in the sub-prime collapse in the states - they're not infallible either.
Great consolation for the people who listened to the doomsters over the last ten years telling them not to buy - prices were too high in 1999 eh !Cos its their home first, an asset second.
Actually, how many banks are buying up new property for branch networks/headquarters, or how many estate agents are expanding rather than selling up?
Freeing up capital can be a valid reason for a business to sell property . I know several auctioneers in the south east who, in a private capacity, have built up extensive property portfolios over the last number of years.
Seriously - you're calling into question the motives of individuals who have nothing at stake except their reputations. And yet somehow that seems to be less palatable to you than believing a salesman whose employer is overseeing mass exploitation of the young people of this country for their own profit.
Think we're in danger of having 2 parallel threads on house prices here...can we stick to the subject?
Firefly.
Yes, this is supposed to be about the Future Shock programme and the Primetime debate. One of Power's more persuasive arguments was that a lot of the boom in prices was "catching up". I have to admit I was very impressed with him...he was debating with an intellectual heavyweight and in my view he came out on top.
Were you not surprised KalEl when he described the Irish housing market as insane over the past two years?
I'm not sure...he seemed exasperated with Professor Kelly at the time so it's hard to know if he meant the rises were crazy in size or that people were crazy. I wouldn't read too much into it.
"If we saw another two or three years of the sort of insanity we've seen over the past couple of years in the housing market then I would agree with Morgan."
It seems to me that the statement seemed to contradict Power's assertion that the market was built on sound fundamentals. Could have been a slip of the tongue, possibly Freudian.
Yes, this is supposed to be about the Future Shock programme and the Primetime debate. One of Power's more persuasive arguments was that a lot of the boom in prices was "catching up".
But you are still talking about house prices........
One of Power's more persuasive arguments was that a lot of the boom in prices was "catching up". I have to admit I was very impressed with him...he was debating with an intellectual heavyweight and in my view he came out on top.
For the cost of a typical house in an area favoured by a management level family in Dublin, Ireland, you could buy nine similar houses in Houston, Texas, three in Amsterdam, two in Sydney and almost two in Tokyo, according to an international survey.
The central banks of the world cannot allow property prices to fall but neither can they allow them to rise
Apart from the sentamentalising and the "nobody told me there could be interest rate rises, I wasn't expecting that" stuff (it may well be the biggest purchase of their life - you think they'd research it a little).
the brain tumour woman
Much and all as I found this annoying and trite, it did highlight one important point about the housing market in Ireland - people have been so desperate to buy that they haven't researched it properly, don't know what interest rates are doing and have an unshakeable belief that property always goes up. I wouldn't be surprised if that woman's attitude was mirrored all over the country. You take it for granted when you frequent websites like this that everyone knows what the ECB will do from month to month (sure doesn't Trichet telegraph it in his conference) but most people seem to be financially illiterate and these interest rate rises have caused a significant amount of pain and uncertainty.
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