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2Pack said:The Irish long run average would also have been when mortgage interest rates were not atypically 10-15% . The current rate is about 3.75% .
What the euro has not changed is the long term ratio betwen average house prices and average rents but I cannot find those figures...probably a state secret.
I seem to remember a long term 4x ratio in the UK but will concede a 6x here going forward to reflect our semi permanent low interest rates. 10x is obviously off the wall .Neffa said:The multiple is actually for the UK & US, including periods of IR's in double figures. I don't know what the Irish long run average is/was. I think the point is that if you are looking at a 25 year commitment then you should think about what these fundamental ratios have done over time.
Look forward to that. Rent is a fundamental and fast changing 'real measure of worth' for the property and I think that there is also a long term ratio between annual average rents and annual average home values somewhere. That is even less flattering than the values/income rations above I'll wager . [broken link removed] avers to it but it is strikingly absent from discussion as a statistic in Ireland .......maybe we dont rent or maybe its an inconvenient statisticThere is an OECD paper on your second point which shows Ireland off the chart in comparison to other countries. I think the link must be on AAM somewhere. I'll see if I can find it.
LOLRemix said:Trichet said the other day that at their last hiking meeting a major consideration in the decision to raise rates was because house prices are rising way beyond comfort levels.
I've just sent a note off to the ECB (info@ecb.int) referring to the latest reports on accelerating house prices in Ireland and asked if Mr. Trichet is being kept aware of the alarming situation here.
For what it's worth!
whathome said:Am I right in thinking that the TSB/ESRI report for a particular month actually represents market activity (sale agreed prices) from a few months previous? If the figures are compiled from TSB data, it could relate to the mortgage drawdown date rather than deal strike prices for that month. So the reported growth for May represent deals done in Feb or March that are closing in May when the mortgage is drawn down.
Remix said:Trichet said the other day that at their last hiking meeting a major consideration in the decision to raise rates was because house prices are rising way beyond comfort levels.
I've just sent a note off to the ECB (info@ecb.int) referring to the latest reports on accelerating house prices in Ireland and asked if Mr. Trichet is being kept aware of the alarming situation here.
For what it's worth!
walk2dewater said:Is the TSB index measuring actual prices paid, or asking prices, or mortgage amount paid out?
Chamar said:That's too funny! I'm not sneering, but like Trichet and friends even consider Ireland for a SECOND when they set interest rates. And who can blame them when Ireland barely accounts for 1% of the EU economy.
And they will. The last time M3 growth was around the 10% mark in Germany the Bundesbank as it then was ran a rate of around 4.5% for a long time .Remix said:Oh agreed on that! and will that ever become more obvious if interest rates accelerate upwards for the sake of greater europe.
They will relish it. We did not control our banks and stop the foolish lending and bubble economy is their attitude. Spain is in the same boat.room305 said:Worth remembering also that the prospect or even the event of a crash here won't register much with the ECB.
Remix said:So perhaps Ireland, Dublin in particular, although small and insignificant, can be viewed as a leading indicator, a warning if you like, of what could be in store for more significant parts of the zone if interest rates stay too low for too long.
Calina said:Ireland, Dublin as canary in the mine, you mean?
walk2dewater said:in future, ECB could even propose penalties for countries that 'threaten the stability of the euro' through reckless domestic policies.
Irish central nbank and IFSRA regulate lending policies.But all this is possible only if the perceived blame is on Irish govt. and not big bad Trichet and his henchmen in Frankfurt.
On other hand, the very credibility of a one-size fits all interest rate and the € itself would be threatened if the perception is that it was the ECB/EU that messed up to Ireland Inc.
walk2dewater said:I see the point, i.e. ECB announces to rest of Eurozone and new EU states, "look at Ireland, see what can happen unless you carefully manage how ECB rates affect your particular economy"..."there are benefits AND responsibilities to being in the Eurozone" ... "you must use domestic mechanisms to prevent local asset bubbles" etc etc
in future, ECB could even propose penalties for countries that 'threaten the stability of the euro' through reckless domestic policies.
But all this is possible only if the perceived blame is on Irish govt. and not big bad Trichet and his henchmen in Frankfurt.
On other hand, the very credibility of a one-size fits all interest rate and the € itself would be threatened if the perception is that it was the ECB/EU that messed up to Ireland Inc.
Interesting times ahead methinks.
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