Current public sentiment towards the housing market?

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An ever greater consequence is that because of the perceived equity in property actual cash reserves will be low or even negative.
 
I have called a 'crash' already. Its just the time it takes to sell (lead time) which is why is it not visible now. Expect xmas for it to in public domain. (earlier in business pages)

 

This is just what I "know" of what some people I know/know off to have done:

"Remortgaged to pay for Classic cars"
"Remortgaged to buy a motorbike"
"Remortgaged to buy a foreign investment"
"Remortgaged and put all existing loans from the car and holiday loan and then could take out a new loan for a new car"
"Remortgaged to pay for a holiday"
"Remortgaged to pay for new TV and Christmas presents in 2005"

They are just some of the things I know have been done by people - but Im sure there are many,many more that have done it.

I just have a feeling that more and more people over the past 2-3 years have actually topped up/remortgaged up to present values of their houses and if they fall in value - they are in negative equity, but with their shiny new car and tv to keep them happy.
 
 

Apologies for last mail pressed send too quickly.

Is'nt this exactly what Eddie Hobbs usually suggests in his "Show me the money" programme.
 

Had to add one i heard of recently;

"Remortgaged to buy a horse"!!

This was in order to buy a racehorse with her brother and as anyone who watched Hector on "Only Fools Buy Horses" it certainly wasn't cheap.

The most astonishing aspect is she reckoned it was 'an investment'...
 
yes well, high return investments are usually high risk aren't they?

Ah, but you're assuming that Irish people can remember how to equate risk with reward.

In our minds, the highest reward investment (property - due to leverage) is the least risky (sure property prices only ever go up...!).
 
Mount st annes - 2 bed apartments 750K all sold out !!!!

I am truly astonished at a) the price and b) how any one could pay that kind of money for an apartment in Miltown in todays market that is showing all the signs of at best a slow down .
 

Hmmmm. Now I am worried...
Although I just find it hard to believe that people would be stupid enough to remortgage up to the max in order to buy ridiculous luxuries (a horse for God's sake!?!? ) and pay for them over 30yrs.
But I suppose, what is it they say about one being born every minute?
 
Mount st annes - 2 bed apartments 750K all sold out !!!!

I am truly astonished at a) the price and b) how any one could pay that kind of money for an apartment in Miltown in todays market that is showing all the signs of at best a slow down .


Which development are you talking about - from what I've seen, these apartments are coming down in price...

Old price : €695,000


New price : €675,000
www.daft.ie/135338
 
Mount st annes - 2 bed apartments 750K all sold out !!!!

I am truly astonished at a) the price and b) how any one could pay that kind of money for an apartment in Miltown in todays market that is showing all the signs of at best a slow down .

They are in for a rude awakening in the near future
 
Same properties are €1,450pm to rent or €3,150pm to buy (100% mortgage).

More than double!
 
Which development are you talking about - from what I've seen, these apartments are coming down in price...

Old price : €695,000


New price : €675,000
www.daft.ie/135338

Jason7's talking about the latest release - 2beds "from €715k"
which, funnily enough, is what you'll end up paying after Stamp on the €675k listed above
 
Mount st annes - 2 bed apartments 750K all sold out !!!!

I am truly astonished at a) the price and b) how any one could pay that kind of money for an apartment in Miltown in todays market that is showing all the signs of at best a slow down .

From this cache (11 Aug) it looks like the last brand new 2 beds in the latest phase were sold months ago:
 
From this cache (11 Aug) it looks like the last brand new 2 beds in the latest phase were sold months ago:


..which makes more sense, because you could have sold a caravan for €750 K a few months ago....
 
IMF warns over UK property crash

[broken link removed]

Ireland get's a mention...

"House prices in Spain, Ireland and the United Kingdom still look elevated, and could come under pressure in a rising interest rate environment," it said.

"At this point, concerns centre on the US, although other markets, such as those in Ireland, Spain and the United Kingdom, also still seem overvalued by most conventional measures."
 

Sure there's nothing to worry about so - prices are merely "elevated"...
And anyway, does anyone take any notice of these pronouncements from the likes of IMF? Let's see how much coverage it gets...
 
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