N
The poster asked for advice, as far as I know he/she doesn't live in England, so how this is of any relevance is beyond me - are the market conditions (Ireland now, versus UK 'for a long time') comparable?
Presumably he/she does not want to be part of a long chain, so is free to take whatever action he/she deems necessary to prevent it.
You seem to be a fan of property chains as per your experience in England and your 'forecasts' (wonder where you got that crystal ball), others are not.
We are now in a falling market (and may remain so for next 2 years)
It was more the prediction of the end of the falling market, rather than it's existence. What makes you think it will last 2 years, or be over in 2 years?
You cannot simultaneously accept someone's offer to buy a property and then continue to offer it on the open market.
quote]
I did !!
I agree with you when you say
"There appears to be an attitude from SOME buyers that as the market is currently a buyers market that it is perfectly ok to treat sellers with contempt."
That is the point I was trying to make, possibly badly. It is important for everyone buyers, sellers and estate agents to treat each other properly.
Really rmelly. What are you on? As i said previously
"If by "forecast" you mean me saying property prices are falling and may continue for next 2 years, well I thought just about everybody was saying that. If you feel different please enlighten me."
I haven't seen anyone other than you say 2 years. I've seen people say modest falls this year with static or low growth next year and beyond, or continual fall indefinitely etc. but no one that says prices continuing to fall for 2 years - I would just like to know what you base this on? Are you an Economist?
I don't live in England and I'm not being underhand as I told the buyers that I can only seriously consider their offer when they go sale agreed. My feeling is that they could be waiting some time for their property to sell so they aren't really in a position to make a serious offer on mine - unless of course they opt for bridging but I'm not sure if this is an option anymore? I haven't heard of anyone doing for years but of course everything moved so fast in the last few years it was hardly needed, I suppose.
"There will be a sharp fall in Irish housing completions over the next two years, with house prices also set to fall, according to construction industry economist Jerome Casey."
This quote is from May 2007 - almost a year ago, so not relevant.
Morgan Kelly makes no reference to 2 years.
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?