N
The Manchester market aint going anywhere. It may sound cheap compared to Ireland but £175k for a one bed is way too much.
Even top spec there is not much of a market for such apartments.
Salford Quays is in my opinion not a nice place to live. Soul-less.
The BBC move will no doubt put the place on the map but you would be better off buying a bargin city centre flat in about 18-24 months once the correction in prices is fully completed.
You could probably buy the same spec flat in the city centre for £120k at the moment.
Personally with the limited knowledge I have of the manchester market i believe it to be swamped with apartments and has been for the last while.
Best avoided would be my advice.
To over supply is finished. Your knowledge appears a little out of date
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/t.../construction_and_property/article3048591.eceGlut of new flats leaves regional markets on verge of collapse
The filling of city centres with “Identikit” apartments has left the price of such developments in danger of collapse. Housebuilding analysts are giving warning of price falls next year in some regional cities, saying that declines might be followed by years of stagnation.
Alastair Stewart, of Dresdner Kleinwort, said: “The proportion of new-build properties that are apartments has gone up from 21 per cent in 2000 to 49 per cent in the latest quarter. In various cities in the UK, such as Leeds, Manchester, Ipswich, Norwich, Leicester, Nottingham and Birmingham, there’s a vast oversupply.”
To over supply is finished. Your knowledge appears a little out of date
Where about in Manchester do you live and how long have you been there?
The city is awash with empty apartments. There are developments built 2/3 years ago that developers are still trying to shift which leave the current residents with huge holes in their management accounts.
I have worked as an external project manager for some of the biggest developers in the city centre and they are s*** scarred of not selling them all or making a loss on their developments.
It would be a buyers market if there was anyone wishing to buy a city centre apartment at the moment.
I predict a real term fall of 30-40% off Manchester city centre flats in the coming 3-4 years.
How is the UK property market at the moment?
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Panorama had a progrogramme tonight on mortgage fraud in British property market. Amateur landlords seem to be particularly vunerable. The problem with the scams shown is that if you buy a property and it is either reposessed or you sell it for a loss, it is up to you to make up the shortfall. The developer already has his money.
One investor paid 200,000 stg on paper in 2006 for a 2 bed flat (she actually paid 170,000, the deposit was imaginary -gifted to her by the Developer). When she wasn't able to let the flat for the 1,200 pm, as she was assured she would be able to do, and she was unable to service the debt, it was reposessed. The exact same property has just now been bought by another investor for 75,000 stg. She may now end up homeless herself, having to sell her own house, in order to repay the shortfall to the bank.
Here's the link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/ne...mp=wm&news=1&ms3=6&ms_javascript=true&bbcws=2
Tread very carefully, or better still don't tread at all.
Murt
You at least should visit the area to check out the infrastructure, transport links, general state etc.
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