His predictions been wrong previously but does anyone really think he'll be wrong this time
His previous predictions were not wrong . . . Saturation point has to arrive at some point.
If you're out by ten years then you're out, simple as.
I'm as bearish as they come but nobody can credibly claim it was a good idea to sell an asset and forego triple-digit gains, in anticipation of a crash a decade later ...
I can't do better than quote this post:
Originally Posted by room305 http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showthread.php?p=486064#post486064
If you're out by ten years then you're out, simple as.
I'm as bearish as they come but nobody can credibly claim it was a good idea to sell an asset and forego triple-digit gains, in anticipation of a crash a decade later ...
It's one thing to recognise that a market is in a bubble state - it's quite another to identify when the market is peaking. Those who put off buying in 2001 on McWilliams's advice will be a lot less able to afford today's prices.
A bubble is a bubble, simple as too.
Same thing happened with internet shares - Alan Greenspan called it a bubble and some people still made big money off it before it crashed by finding a bigger fool to sell on to. This did not mean Greenspan was wrong, just that you can't put a time limit on when people are going to see reason.
Ubiq is right. I bought my home, a flat in London in 1990 (91?). Six months after buying it was worth 60% of the value I paid for it. I was lucky in that I found a long term tenant (even better a German) who paid the mortgage and I sold the flat 10 years later at a very small profit. Adjusting for inflation this was actually a loss. Negative equity is horrific. All your choices are taken away. It leads to an increase in interest rates.
I have some UK friends who experienced negative equity in the early 1990s and they reported the same feelings of entrapment and helplessness.
I don't think anyone said it was the end of the world. I think imogen's post serves more of a reminder of the feeling of entrapment and helplessness if you get stuck with negative equity. Many people seem to think, if you get into trouble then all you need to do is sell up (as if it was the easiest thing in the world). That may have applied for the last 10 years or so, but not anymore.Hardly the end of the world is it? They still had a roof over their heads or did negative equity mean they couldn't afford the mortgage repayments? Out of curiosity are they still in negative equity?
I bought my first (and current) house back in 2001. I remember at the time being sickened by the price (200k punts), thought it ridiculously overpriced and listened to all the predictions of 'the crash'. But we wanted a family home and decided to take a chance. But just in case we extended ourselves as much as the bank would allow (nowhere near as much as they'd allow in later years) to get a home in an area that we would be happy to stay if indeed we ended up in negative equity. Best decision ever. Same houses currently asking for just under €600k. The only problem we have is that with a growing family we'd like to trade up but refuse to get into higher debt. So teh option is to get a bigger house in a cheaper area. That's what we're currently looking for. Of course stamp duty means that the area has to be considerably cheaper so we can pay the duty without having to add it to the mortgage.
But realistically I can see us still being where we are in a few years time, houses just don't seem to be selling. For us I think the key was picking somewhere that we knew we could bear to stay longterm in case the economy started to weaken. Too many people didn't consider this and are now stuck with the prospect of raising their kids in areas with no green space, no schools, no facilities, etc..
I'm just glad we bit the bullet when we did and didn't listen to advice to 'hold out'.
Would you do it again right now?
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?