southsideboy
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Here's a few:southsideboy said:I have yet to see any credible arguments in this thread which would suggest any good reasons for a crash given the state of the economy at the moment.
104,000 empty investment properties. Interest rates have increased by 37.5% in six months, that will be 62.5% in a year come December 2006.southsideboy said:I have yet to see any credible arguments in this thread which would suggest any good reasons for a crash given the state of the economy at the moment.
2Pack said:More news.
Yesterdays sunday trib carried reports that the criteria for interest only mortgages....the ones where you never pay anything off for 35 years...... have been further relaxed in recent times.
So the financial sector , having used up all the repayment over 20 years customers and the repayment over 35 year customers, find that all thats left to lend to is the interest only for 35 years type of person.
They will have been used up....by october I'd say. Expect the interest only 40 year product to appear for christmas .
Remix said:Indo reporting this morning the the most recent census may have uncovered as many as 245,000 dwellings considered unoccupied...
It's actually worse than that Remix, you subtracted the wrong number!Remix said:Indo reporting this morning the the most recent census may have uncovered as many as 245,000 dwellings considered unoccupied...
soma said:It's actually worse than that Remix, you subtracted the wrong number!
The article says 275,000 were actually identified as being vacant. Another 30,000 (so 305k in total) were just assumed to be vacant because when the census takers "called on various occasions" - no one was home. It's likely alot of those 30,000 were holiday homes, unfit for habitation or just people were actually on holidays for a month etc.
But that still leaves the 275,000 - that is *shocking*.
I havent read the article you're referring to, but I'm guessing this individual borrowed from a 'sub-prime' lender. They've been making head-way in Ireland too AFAIK.polaris said:From the Denver Post article:
"Her variable interest rate started at 10.4 percent and could have surpassed 16 percent. "
Why are these rates so high in what I would have thought is an ultra-competitive home-loan market in the States?
the article in questionsoma said:The article says 275,000 were actually identified as being vacant.
whizzbang said:the article in question
http://www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ca=9&si=1636317&issue_id=14226
2Pack said:This is an enormous overhang. When the last bust happened in England in the early 1990s the empty rate was around 7% IIRC
YOIKES!!!!!!
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