Calina said:I can just see it - 10 years down the line there'll be agents in Poland, Bulgaria, Cape Verde and Croatia selling cheap property in Ireland.
I'm not sure how far down the prices are going to do. I'm not altogether sure that percentage falls are meaningful at the moment as the figure on which they'll be calculated is currently unknown. When I hear "there'll be a 50% drop in property prices" I can't actually visualise that without knowing 50% of what. So I don't want to speculate on percentage falls.
I do think that there is no indication of sanity in the market at the moment. I realise buying a home is an emotional purchase, but it is the choice of home itself should be the emotional bit, not the actual fact of owning anything at all. Why buy something unsuitable - you'll never be at home in it anyway, and if the market shifts negatively which it looks like it probably will, you'll be stuck in it, hating it and unable to move.
And yet I saw one person advising that people buy unsuitable stuff, just so that they have something. I cannot see the sense in it.
Well my guess as to where the support level lies in the market is; when the gross yield achievable reflects all finance and holding costs with a premium, say 2-3% to reflect sector risk. You could construct an equated yield (for analysis purposes) based on the rate achievable on long dated bonds (10 year German Euro) say 3.80% add sector risk say 2.5% = an equated yield of 6.30%. So my stab in the dark is that gross yields will at some stage in the foreseeable future, reach somewhere in the region of 7%.
I love speculating.