G
Neffa said:Maybe what's even more interesting is that residential borrowing increased in one month in Ireland by €2.1bn while the UK increased by £9.1bn (€13.3bn).
i worked out the figure for the mortgage repayments over 35 years in todays money assuming 2% average inflation (this is ECB's target) amounts to 357k so added to the real interest makes 690k in real terms assuming you dont pay off mortgage early etc ,but for illustrative purposes it shows that the 500k house must increase by 40% in real terms (after inflation) to break even,so one percent real increase in prices every year,considering incomes are only growing in real terms by 2% and people spend less than half their income on housing i suppose its possible to get close to one per cent real increase per annum in the long term.bearishbull said:Actually i factored in inflation using the mortage calculator at www.jeacle.ie/mortgage the real interest on 500k for 35 years @ average 5% is 333k in TODAYS money, i dont think this calculator takes inflation into account on principal repayment element of the mortgage repayments,the 500k borrowed is reduced by inflation rate after every principal repayment but im too lazy to work it out!
yes im just talking about the real cost of the finance for a property not its up keep maintenace insurance etc.Calina said:Do all these calculations additionally pre-suppose no outlays in ongoing maintenance and upgrade work such as new wallpaper, new kitchens and the occasional conservatory?
Tell that to residents of japan who bought in years before the crash. Theres no guarantee they will rise with inflation in future,during the 1980's they didnt keep up with inflation for several years. Stores of value dont always keep up with inflation eg:fiat money.tyoung said:Bearishbull
Houses and property in general are a very good store of value over the longterm.
I remember reading a report in The Economist that London House prices in 1919 were unchanged from the level after the Great Fire 300 years earlier. It's food for thought that 300 years of economic growth hardly showed in house prices. That all changed in the 20th century with the advent of central banking.`In the previous the world worked on the gold standard which limited the growth of the money supply. The price fixing operation that is at the heart of central banking can create money effortlessly. Houses cannot be. They still require imput of a limited resource (land), materials and labour. They also have a very longterm utility.
Having said that there can be periods where prices run up in excess of what is warrented. I would agree that Irish house prices are vunerable to any number of shocks in the short to medium term. Over the longer term, as long as current monetary policy holds, houses will remain a remarkabey good store of value.
Money supply in the Eurozone is growing in the 8 to 9% range. Already finance ministers are calling for "dialogue" and "policy flexibility", all code for stop raising interest rates!
The forces for inflation are to great to be resisted. Over the longerterm houses will remain a remarkable store of value.
Regards
For future reference you might'nt have to count all of them, just take an approximately representative sample of districts.gearoidmm said:Just wondering if there is anywhere that you can get figures in Ireland for the number of properties on the market at any given time. When you search with myhome.ie you are restricted to 150 results.
One thing that the US has shown us is that inventory starts to mount first before there is any sign of a drop in house prices.
Just because of my OCD, I went through all the localities in Dubin individually to get the total number of houses for sale. The only one that exceeded the overall limit was Tallaght with >150. Other than that they were all less than 150 and the total was 3165 properties on the market in Co. Dublin. That doesn't seem like a lot really but I have no idea how that compares with other cities this size. I am also presuming that every property in Dublin ends up on myhome.ie.
It would be interesting to follow up on this in a month's time and see if it has changed
Howitzer said:Title of article: End of road for soaring property market. I've got the impression for quite a while that the Indo has been trying to talk the property market down.
http://www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=9&si=1645649&issue_id=14300
(Free registraion required)
"The soft landing seems to be happening. It won't happen across the entire market in one fell swoop and it won't hit geographically at the same time."
beattie said:Yes it is refreshing to see the Indo give what is a balanced view of the market. I didn't realise that properties in Glasnevin have had to slash the price to garner interest. If ECB hikes on Thursday then it could become more interesting very quickly
snuffle said:I have been observing a slight slowing down in the market in my area for the past few months, properties that were going on at ludicrous prices have been slowly moving back down to more realistic prices, ie back down to the levels of a year ago. Seeing that headline this morning just brought a big smile to my face! Seems the worm has turned.....
[FONT=Verdana, Arial] The housing market may be nearing the end of this particular journey, but it is not a bad thing. Cool heads and calm decisions by us all will ensure a housing market in the near future driven by common sense and respect rather than foolhardiness and greed.
phoenix_n said:Looked at one place in addison. Not sure if its the one mentioned in the newspaper but its price 600,000 for a 3 bed duplex. Now that price is wrong. 600 might scrape you a victorian terrace in glasnevin (more likely phibs though) but for a duplex someone got the price wrong initially.
Agreed, no sympathy for themHowitzer said:I wonder if any "flippers" got burned at the E600K price. These will be the first people collared by a turn in the housing market and, quite frankly, they deserve to be.
cjh said:[DNG reports slowdown in second-hand Dublin house prices]
[broken link removed]
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?