S
Sarah Wellband
Guest
As someone who was also in London during the house price boom and crash I'd like to point out four factors, three of which are unlikely to happen in Ireland;
1. Interest rates went from 7.5% to 11% and then to 15% in a very short space of time whilst the Govt were trying to defend Sterling (I recall the day 15% was announced as it coincided with my moving into a new flat!)
2. Nigel Lawson repealed multiple tax relief on properties and limited it to £30,000 per property not per person. This was in the April 1988 budget but there was a "window" until the August. The result? Buyers completing mortgage applications at 10pm on a Friday evening with 3 buddies/colleagues/almost complete strangers to beat the deadline.
3. House builder (Wimpey/Barratt, etc) and lenders offering 100% packages with no legal fees - young couples found it very easy to buy a house with no commitment either financial or to each other (no moral highground here - that's just the way it was).
And finally - people were panicked into buying one bed and studio flats which were quickly outgrown once children came along but due to high mortgages, reduced incomes and falling prices they could not move. In a lot of these examples they justed handed the keys back and started again. I guess conceivably this could happen here but i think it's inlikely.
House prices, IMHO, will only fall if there is a big increase in unemployment - say a couple of the US employers pulled out - and people simply could not pay their mortgage. Interest rate rises, whilst painful, can be absorbed as long as they are slow (as ECB moves have been to date) by adjusting lifestyles as long as the income is still there....
Regards,
Sarah
www.rea.ie
1. Interest rates went from 7.5% to 11% and then to 15% in a very short space of time whilst the Govt were trying to defend Sterling (I recall the day 15% was announced as it coincided with my moving into a new flat!)
2. Nigel Lawson repealed multiple tax relief on properties and limited it to £30,000 per property not per person. This was in the April 1988 budget but there was a "window" until the August. The result? Buyers completing mortgage applications at 10pm on a Friday evening with 3 buddies/colleagues/almost complete strangers to beat the deadline.
3. House builder (Wimpey/Barratt, etc) and lenders offering 100% packages with no legal fees - young couples found it very easy to buy a house with no commitment either financial or to each other (no moral highground here - that's just the way it was).
And finally - people were panicked into buying one bed and studio flats which were quickly outgrown once children came along but due to high mortgages, reduced incomes and falling prices they could not move. In a lot of these examples they justed handed the keys back and started again. I guess conceivably this could happen here but i think it's inlikely.
House prices, IMHO, will only fall if there is a big increase in unemployment - say a couple of the US employers pulled out - and people simply could not pay their mortgage. Interest rate rises, whilst painful, can be absorbed as long as they are slow (as ECB moves have been to date) by adjusting lifestyles as long as the income is still there....
Regards,
Sarah
www.rea.ie