I don't follow this.
OK, so I have a €600k house with €1m debt.
What is in it for me to trade down? The ultimate trade down is to sell the house for €600k and be left with €400k of unsecured debt to repay to the bank.
The situation is so hopeless, that I am better off keeping my €600k stake in the property market and hoping that in time, it will come back again.
If I trade down and own no stake in the property market, I will have no chance of paying off the €400k loan.
Now let's look at the guy with a €400k house and €200k loan. Let's leave him alone and happy with his low loan to value. Let's not create more problems.
However, I do agree that stamp duty should be reduced to reduce the costs of moving. Some people are slow to take action due to the high costs involved. This makes the market inefficient. If I have a €600k house with a €500k mortage and I expect house prices to drop, there really is little point in me selling now with a view to buying again in a year's time due to the high stamp duty.
Brendan
I don't follow this either.
>>Keeping people in homes is all very well but subsidising those in big houses rather than asking them to trade down to reduce their debt is lunacy from every perspective.<<
Even if he sold the house for 600k, there is still an outstanding debt to the bank of 400k - who is going to pay that?
The optimist inside many of us might rather keep the higher value house in the hope of making back our losses, but if you take an unbiased view (i.e. what you have lost in equity is gone), then trading down and reducing your mortgage is a more sustanable position to be in if your earnings cannot support the higher level of debt
Which position would you prefer to be in - a €100k home with €300k of debt or a €400k loan with €600k of debt?
In both cases, I am in serious trouble. In both cases, the bank is in serious trouble.
The only way out for me is if house prices rise. In the first case, they have to rise by 200%. In the second, they have to rise by "only" 50%.
The interest is twice as high in the second case, but I have 4 times more house.
While the risk is higher in the second case, in that I could lose a further €300k, I am bankrupt anyway, so I may as well be bankrupt for a bigger amount.
Brendan
Which position would you prefer to be in - a €100k home with €300k of debt or a €400k loan with €600k of debt?
In both cases, I am in serious trouble. In both cases, the bank is in serious trouble.
Brendan
But this is all about negative equity. If I don't have a house and I earn €50k a year, of course I would be happier with a €300k mortgage than a €600k mortgage.Which position would you prefer to be in - a €100k home with €300k of debt or a €400k loan with €600k of debt?
In both cases, I am in serious trouble. In both cases, the bank is in serious trouble.
Brendan
Not necessarily the case, assuming negativity equity DOES not come into the equation.
Is it possible for them to swop? - Derkaisers Question, not mine......
I hope I have read this one right, Derkaiser?
Whatabout stampduty, Derkaiser?
And if I live in a mortgage free house worth €600k and I have no kids and things are tight, I would consider trading down to a €300k house especially if the transaction cost of doing so was low.
Folks
The ban on discussing house prices is still in force.
I have to delete posts and responses quoting those posts.
Please make your point without discussing house prices.
Brendan
http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showthread.php?t=117814
Good example of a person who needs to downgrade, following recent change of circumstances. Have a look at the advice given in post 10.
And if you live in a house worth €600k with a €700k mortgage you would benefit similary from moving to a house worth €300k with a €400k mortgage
If I was in this position, I would prefer to try to hold onto my bigger house and hope that the market rises instead of falls. But I would be aware of this risk.
The original post has a €400k negative equity which is much higher than a €100k negative equity.
Again, that has nothing to do with the main topic of this post. People in negative equity.Brendan
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