3 times a consultant general surgeon's income, a shelf stacker's income or rental income - just curious?
3 times the salary of the person buying the house.
Perhaps the consultant in Blackrock should get paid more than the consultant in Wexford? Local pricing based on supply and demand and all that.So flawed it's comical - The consultant should be paying the same multilple of his salary for the detached house beside Blackrock clinic as the consultant buying the detached house beside Wexford General hospital !! Shooting the breeze is this way ----------------------->>>>>
Perhaps the consultant in Blackrock should get paid more than the consultant in Wexford? Local pricing based on supply and demand and all that.
Is there any law to stop an estate agent advertising a property at an unbelievably low price?
Price controls would stop other sellers achieving maximum value for their house, but at least if sale values were required to be public we would know how rediculous some of these asking prices are. A single national database of all properties for sale would also assist people trying to estimate the true value of a property and help buyers and sellers weed out unrealistic asking prices.
oh sorry I missed your point, I was working on the assumption of the "Best property" they could afford, I see what you mean nowlol . Still can't see how ridiculous it is? Using your theory the surgeon in Blackrock clinic would pay the same price for a one bedroomed apartment in Blackrock as he would for the detached house in Blackrock ie 3 times income!!
So, you want house owners to band together to set up a pricing monopoly?
No, but perhaps there should be more regulation of property advertisements and sales, to stop EAs and reckless sellers destroying the wealth of this country.
"The market sets the price not the owners, an owner can ask for whatever they want, but to actually sell an owner must accept what a buyer is willing to offer"
"The market sets the price not the owners, an owner can ask for whatever they want, but to actually sell an owner must accept what a buyer is willing to offer"
A house only sells when both the Vendor and the Purchaser comes to a mutual agreement on price and not until then! If the price offered by the purchaser is not agreed by the vendor then there is no sale.
Angela59
This post will be deleted if not edited immediately, talk about being pedantic.
A house only sells when both the Vendor and the Purchaser comes to a mutual agreement on price and not until then! If the price offered by the purchaser is not agreed by the vendor then there is no sale.
Angela59
Merc1, what a silly question to post. Owners can price their house at what they feel is right. I'd bet that your neighbour is getting with the times and has put their price tag lower, to guess what? SELL THE BLOODY THING. I'd also put money on it, that none of the houses are worth the asking, and they in time will lower the price again. Deal with it. The days of robbing people blind are OVER.
Price fixing, certainly busted in your estate and I think some of it's going on in Seabury, Malahide too.
There was a house on there that was cheaper than all the rest by 50K, and of course, now that it's a buyers market, I phoned.
Checked on the daft this morning to see if anything had changed, and nothing new.
I went back on the site this afternoon, and the same house has gone UP 50K. And, it's a house that needs updating.
In these times, a fecking disgrace. Bet the interest will stop now.
Buyers will be shopping for a bargain; and sellers, the only way to sell your property is to price to sell. In some cases, it could be 100K less than neighbours. It will depend on what can & cannot be afforded
Thats why there is no market at the moment, one group is still in cloud cuckoo land and the others know it, i'll let you guess which is which. The buyers can wait, rent and save more, the sellers on the other hand have the properties for sale for a reason.
Yes some might have to sell others but more often than not you will see people reorganise their 5/10 year plans to accommodate the current market and decide to sit it out. It is costing very little to have your house on the market and when they are not getting the price they need you will see houses coming off the market rather than folding to pressure because simply they can't lower much more if any.
The vitriol that is aimed at sellers from the good times is misplaced and hypocritical as buyers are nowing trying to squeeze as many %'s off of the asking price as possible. It makes sense whatever side of the fence you are on because everyone wants the best deal for themselves.
Yes, Mr Man this is what I have done. While I wanted to sell my house, I didn't 'need' to, so I am going to hang onto it for another 5 or so years until the market at least gets back to relative normality. While the frenzied bubble wasn't normal, neither is the current 'coma'.
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