I would have thought that Affordable Housing provides a measure of protection against any downturn since you are purchasing at a discount to market.
How does the clawback operate? Surely they can only clawback from any potential gains? So if you buy for €200k and sell for €200k, there is no clawback. Or do they simply say that they will take a percentage of sale price irregardless of what that sale price is?
The buyers money is safe once the sale price does not dip below the actual price they paid for the property, in the event of a price crash the council are the ones who forgo their portion.
The buyer will see the same return on the sale if the house market stays flat, if it drops by 10% or if it drops by the full clawhback percentage.
The problem is most AH units being offered are what most would consider starter homes and will have to be traded up.
I think affordable housing is meant to help people buy homes and is not meant to be an investment vehicle.
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