Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

negative equity - share your personal experiences

2»

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,397 ✭✭✭✭Turtyturd


    ad83 wrote: »
    Yeah im taking this one all the way to yale.

    Don't get ahead of yourself.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    Turtyturd wrote: »
    Don't get ahead of yourself.

    Thx for keeping me in check


  • Registered Users Posts: 516 ✭✭✭pabloh999


    Dude piss off, your full of crap, an electrician now is it???? who could afford a 900k mortgage after setting up a business not long after finishing an apprenticeship???? what f uc king world do you live on? Stop trolling and if you want to talk crap and doom and gloom about the economy and go watch prime time instead. Personally I never bought a house in this hole of a country and anybody who is in negative equity because they bought at the height of the boom deserves it for being retarded enough to buy a house at those extortionate prices. No sympathy, simple as that!!!!!

    Ah tell us how ye really feel..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,290 ✭✭✭Oregano_State


    Good idea - the engineering sector is booming at the moment.


    In the Middle East anyway.

    There's plenty jobs in engineering in Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,861 ✭✭✭Irishcrx


    There's plenty jobs in engineering in Ireland.

    Second that - I work for an engineering company and were expanding at the minute..


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    There's no way he got a 900k mortgage. He's having you on. His monthly repayments would have been two thirds of his net monthly income or about €36k per year. He's lying through his arse.

    I checked the property register. House was actually a little more than 900k. He obviously wasn't handing over half his income to the tax man as you are right repayments were quite high assuming he borrowed 10x his annual income. Even with lower interest rates and renting the house out now he must be really struggling


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    There's plenty jobs in engineering in Ireland.
    Irishcrx wrote: »
    Second that - I work for an engineering company and were expanding at the minute..

    True that,it's a shame that the level of engineers coming out of our Universities at the moment is starting to decline,especially in terms of the complexity of some of the technologies around now.It seems the lecturers are stuck in the 80's in what they're teaching the students.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    Irishcrx wrote: »
    Second that - I work for an engineering company and were expanding at the minute..

    Hoping for him things are good in 5 years time. Would that be a reasonable timeframe to graduate studying distance/part time?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    ad83 wrote: »
    I checked the property register. House was actually a little more than 900k. He obviously wasn't handing over half his income to the tax man as you are right repayments were quite high assuming he borrowed 10x his annual income. Even with lower interest rates and renting the house out now he must be really struggling

    A carpenter on 90k a year eh...


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    pmcmahon wrote: »
    True that,it's a shame that the level of engineers coming out of our Universities at the moment is starting to decline,especially in terms of the complexity of some of the technologies around now.It seems the lecturers are stuck in the 80's in what they're teaching the students.

    Can only imagine. Do lecturers who are sitting comfortable in engineering departments for 25 years have any responsibility to go out and upskill as technologies change?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,317 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    I don't quite buy the €900k story. He possibly told his mates it was worth €900k when he bought it, but now he feels like too much of an idiot to admit it.

    I also doubt he was "around the end" of his apprenticeship, probably a couple of years out of it. It was all madness though. Young lads would finish an apprenticeship and spend a few months subcontracting on various sites. Then they'd get friendly with a few contacts, think "I could do this subcontracting lark" and set themselves up as a business, farming out work to younger guys and apprentices. Some of the bigger sites would have multiple layers of subcontractors, each farming out the work to other people and taking a massive cut for themselves.

    This how guys of 22/23 were "running" a business and showing the bank that they were pulling in €100k+ per year. The banks of course, just throwing money at everyone would see a young guy pulling in stupid profits and happily advance them a €700k 100% mortgage.

    Yes, my property is worth significantly less than my mortgage and yes I will need to move to a bigger property soon. But I don't whinge about it. I got myself into this and I'll get myself out of it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    pmcmahon wrote: »
    A carpenter on 90k a year eh...

    Sorry i corrected that he was an electrician if it makes any difference . Was running his own business at the time and was obvioulsy able to convince the bank he was earning. Though not sure how much convincing was required at the time.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 960 ✭✭✭cletus van damme


    pmcmahon wrote: »
    "rent is dead money"

    Ha,tell that to my savings account.

    my mortgage is similar to the rent I'd pay on my 3 bed semi detached.

    So unless you're hosue sharing or staying with your folks - your bank account will be somewhat the same.

    I thjnk you are not comparing like with like so the sake of getting cheap slap on the back.

    I'm not in negative equity , but I must say I find the smugness of non-boom house buyer quite sickening.
    Some people (here and in other threads) actually seem to be gloating that others are in the sh1t.

    Why?? cos they were arrogant during the boom? fair enough they annoyed you , but you really think seeing them depressed and in some cases on the verge of suicide is worth your petty little victory?


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    seamus wrote: »
    I don't quite buy the €900k story. He possibly told his mates it was worth €900k when he bought it, but now he feels like too much of an idiot to admit it.

    I also doubt he was "around the end" of his apprenticeship, probably a couple of years out of it. It was all madness though. Young lads would finish an apprenticeship and spend a few months subcontracting on various sites. Then they'd get friendly with a few contacts, think "I could do this subcontracting lark" and set themselves up as a business, farming out work to younger guys and apprentices. Some of the bigger sites would have multiple layers of subcontractors, each farming out the work to other people and taking a massive cut for themselves.

    This how guys of 22/23 were "running" a business and showing the bank that they were pulling in €100k+ per year. The banks of course, just throwing money at everyone would see a young guy pulling in stupid profits and happily advance them a €700k 100% mortgage.

    Yes, my property is worth significantly less than my mortgage and yes I will need to move to a bigger property soon. But I don't whinge about it. I got myself into this and I'll get myself out of it.

    Fair play to you. I respect that attitude.

    You are right about the madness. He had so much work on he was paying a mate of ours 200 euro to come in and help him for a few (3/4)hours cleaning up just so he could get onto another job

    House was a little more than 900k. Checked the property price register


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,268 ✭✭✭✭MadYaker


    How the hell could a guy like that even get a 900k mortgage? What could he put up as collateral?? I'm too young to have bought property, and to be honest the idea is really not appealing at all considering whats happened over the last 10 years. Maybe I'll just rent forever. My parents bought their current house in 1993 and paid off the mortgage long ago. They bought another house but not in Ireland and as far as I know its value has gone up/stayed the same.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,456 ✭✭✭✭Mr Benevolent


    seamus wrote: »
    Yes, my property is worth significantly less than my mortgage and yes I will need to move to a bigger property soon..

    Ah Seamus, not you too! Now all we need is for Wibbs to be in negative equity and we're fooked.

    Then again, Wibbs probably lives with his parents :D

    All I can say is that I was lucky in an odd way. I got into a fair amount of debt due to loans, credit cards etc, and that put me off buying a place of my own. Now I rent with my girlfriend and I'm happy with that. Being in debt has made me doubly nervous about being 200k in debt with nothing to show for it except a habitable box to sooth the status quo.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    MadYaker wrote: »
    How the hell could a guy like that even get a 900k mortgage? What could he put up as collateral?? I'm too young to have bought property, and to be honest the idea is really not appealing at all considering whats happened over the last 10 years. Maybe I'll just rent forever. My parents bought their current house in 1993 and paid off the mortgage long ago. They bought another house but not in Ireland and as far as I know its value has gone up/stayed the same.

    The house was collateral


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,789 ✭✭✭✭ScumLord


    Irishcrx wrote: »
    Second that - I work for an engineering company and were expanding at the minute..
    Is that engineering speak for eating too many cakes?


  • Registered Users Posts: 43 y0pperz


    ad83 wrote: »
    The house was collateral

    Can't see any potential issues with that


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 9,464 ✭✭✭Celly Smunt


    ScumLord wrote: »
    Is that engineering speak for eating too many cakes?

    Eating too many cakes-energy reimbursement.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 1,239 ✭✭✭lima


    my mortgage is similar to the rent I'd pay on my 3 bed semi detached.

    So unless you're hosue sharing or staying with your folks - your bank account will be somewhat the same.

    I thjnk you are not comparing like with like so the sake of getting cheap slap on the back.

    I'm not in negative equity , but I must say I find the smugness of non-boom house buyer quite sickening.
    Some people (here and in other threads) actually seem to be gloating that others are in the sh1t.

    Why?? cos they were arrogant during the boom? fair enough they annoyed you , but you really think seeing them depressed and in some cases on the verge of suicide is worth your petty little victory?

    Haw Haw Haw.

    Suckers blowing it in everyone's faces back then, where are they now? Stuck in the 'burbs with masses of debt

    ..and I went traveling, came back recently and missed it all :D:D:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,268 ✭✭✭✭MadYaker


    ad83 wrote: »
    The house was collateral

    You for real? Imagine that situation.

    Man walks into bank,

    Man: "Hello id like a 900k mortgage"

    Bank: "No problem, what are you putting up as collateral?"

    Man: "The house I haven't built yet"

    Bank: "Great idea! sign here please"

    You can't get a mortgage without proving that you have the ability to pay it off or some other type of security so the bank know they won't easily end up out of pocket.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 663 ✭✭✭space_man


    ad83 wrote: »
    I agree totally. If it goes south it will have been due to macro conditions a a result of a lehman thread. This thread is fundamentally sound and fully funded until next year

    if at times this thread appears to have too few posters, then that is purely a liquidity problem and in no way can or should it be seen as a solvency issue. end of statement.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 94 ✭✭yesman2000


    Pointless thread/issue really unless you were an investor back in the day trying to make a quick buck or you're looking to sell for some reason.

    If you're in a house you plan to call a home for the next 10 years it's trivial what it's worth. Why even look into, research, care etc. what it's worth, it's probably only going to end badly.

    Also, boom or no boom what electrician/carpenter was on 90k a year ? I definitely don't believe it, anyway.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 960 ✭✭✭cletus van damme


    lima wrote: »
    Haw Haw Haw.

    Suckers blowing it in everyone's faces back then, where are they now? Stuck in the 'burbs with masses of debt

    ..and I went traveling, came back recently and missed it all :D:D:D

    haw haw. indeed.

    You have a point , I had a friend who was always bragging about cash , better holidays, cars, loadsa cocaine etc...
    Wasnt hugely put out by him , he was generous enough, but I couldn't hold a grudge that much that i'm happy that he hasn't a pot to piss in now.
    That's my point, a hard landing is kinda nice to see for people who were too big for their boots but not the extent where people are killing themselves.

    however not only are you smug about missing the whole boom , you can be smug too about all the wonderful fantastic places and cultures in the world that are infinitely better than ireland.
    Esp those south american hilltribes and their justice system...har har...:pac:


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,289 ✭✭✭Padkir


    yesman2000 wrote: »
    Also, boom or no boom what electrician/carpenter was on 90k a year ? I definitely don't believe it, anyway.

    Parents built a house in 2004/2005/2006 (roughly) and the price lads were charging for work was insane!

    Fair enough a decent sized 4 bed detached 2-storey, but the cheapest plasterer Dad trusted wanted 14k for labour and we bought all the materials. Majority of the outside was scratch-coated in one day with 4 lads working and overall, between him doing a few evenings here and there, I'd say there was about 9/10 days work in it and he only had lads with him for 2/3 of those days, as he did most of the hardwall himself! The electrician wanted 8k to wire it.

    So start believing that they were in this type of money and more for years...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 663 ✭✭✭space_man


    i know of lots of Celtic tiger kids who decided to take a year or 2 out and travel, fully expecting to walk into that prize job on their return.
    That turned out well then .....
    Oops! :o


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,281 ✭✭✭donegal_road


    Padkir wrote: »
    Parents built a house in 2004/2005/2006 (roughly) and the price lads were charging for work was insane!

    Fair enough a decent sized 4 bed detached 2-storey, but the cheapest plasterer Dad trusted wanted 14k for labour and we bought all the materials. Majority of the outside was scratch-coated in one day with 4 lads working and overall, between him doing a few evenings here and there, I'd say there was about 9/10 days work in it and he only had lads with him for 2/3 of those days, as he did most of the hardwall himself! The electrician wanted 8k to wire it.

    So start believing that they were in this type of money and more for years...

    some years ago on Liveline (only thing I could pick up in the car that day) a young guy was on, 26 or 27 years old I think. He had a plastering company and wanted to expand. The bank approved a loan of €2 million so he could take on more plasters and do larger contracts. When he rang Liveline, he had moved back in with his folks after all the work had dried up.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    MadYaker wrote: »
    You for real? Imagine that situation.

    Man walks into bank,

    Man: "Hello id like a 900k mortgage"

    Bank: "No problem, what are you putting up as collateral?"

    Man: "The house I haven't built yet"

    Bank: "Great idea! sign here please"

    You can't get a mortgage without proving that you have the ability to pay it off or some other type of security so the bank know they won't easily end up out of pocket.

    The house was already built. The banker who made the loan received his sales bonus straight away and the institution approved the loan under the false impression that if the guy was unable to pay the loan they would have the house which was rising in value


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    space_man wrote: »
    if at times this thread appears to have too few posters, then that is purely a liquidity problem and in no way can or should it be seen as a solvency issue. end of statement.

    Cuts to you and I sitting outside Lenihans office like bold school children/sheehy/goggin


  • Registered Users Posts: 343 ✭✭FreshKnickers


    My story, well, pull up a chair my friend and take a sip of this 40 year old cognac as I spin you my incredible tale of Negative Equity...

    I don't have any.

    Man I'm so boring :-( And I feel left out now.


  • Registered Users Posts: 68 ✭✭ad83


    yesman2000 wrote: »

    Also, boom or no boom what electrician/carpenter was on 90k a year ? I definitely don't believe it, anyway.

    People who ran their own construction businesses during the boom did not work for the average industrial wage. People who run businesses nowadays, both successful and not so successful, still don't


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,925 ✭✭✭✭anncoates


    House worth about 30 percent less than what I paid for although I'm nearly 10 years into the mortgage but I like the area and the house is big enough for my family with room to expand. Mortgage is not a problem to pay as things stand.

    I never went on about property in the boom and I don't gloat at people's misfortune now.

    Boom gloating or bust gloating is just two different sudes of being a wanker.


  • Registered Users Posts: 60 ✭✭colm911


    2007 I started working for my father (fast food business) full time earning very good wages plus cash incentives on the side (don't we all at some point). The banks literally and I mean literally offered me anything I wanted, mortgage, car loan, holiday loan. Bear in mind I was 19 at time time and how appealing that would of been to 19 year old. Thank god I preferred tinkering with cars then worrying about that sort of stuff. Never took a cent off them. Still to this day I've done what I always do, park outside the bank machine at 11.55 pm and withdraw it as soon as it hits and it's all in a very safe place where the banks can't get it. I've not one bit of sympathy to anyone who OUTLIVED their means. Note the capitals in outlived. However, I know of several young couples that did borrow and live in badly built estates, I pity the genuine people who borrowed for somewhere to live sensibly but no sympathy for couples who went and built a 5000 square foot house with a 50 grand kitchen for him her and the cat. Rant over


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,239 ✭✭✭lima


    Any annoying thing about it is that mate of mine who used to rip it up socially in the boom are all boring feckers now living in the suburbs and refuse to spend money cos their houses are worth e200k less than they bought them for. They are all so bored they are having babies. Boring feckers. I arrived back from being away and am loaded but the partys over (well for them anyway!!)

    Call it gloating but now I can rub it in their faces..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,154 ✭✭✭✭josip


    ad83 wrote: »
    I checked the property register. House was actually a little more than 900k.

    The property register only starts from January 1st 2010 and I doubt if any banks were handing out 900K mortgages to electricians then.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,497 ✭✭✭omahaid


    lima wrote: »
    They are all so bored they are having babies.

    Riding is cheap!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,221 ✭✭✭NuckingFacker


    yesman2000 wrote: »
    Pointless thread/issue really unless you were an investor back in the day trying to make a quick buck or you're looking to sell for some reason.

    If you're in a house you plan to call a home for the next 10 years it's trivial what it's worth. Why even look into, research, care etc. what it's worth, it's probably only going to end badly.

    Also, boom or no boom what electrician/carpenter was on 90k a year ? I definitely don't believe it, anyway.
    Umm, loads, actually. I have one friend who was a kitchen fitter/carpenter - he was getting 50-60k per kitchen-mad stuff, but that's what he was getting. That was for the average stuff(to him). He did a few in S.Dublin for 250k+ each. Uh huh, that's €250,000.00 each. And unless you are in that trade, you won't know that a kitchen, no matter how fancy, costs buttons really..

    A new top of the range sports car was no bigge, sure one in black and one in white please, and change them in a few months, sure why not. And a huge site please, to build a new mcmansion on. A lad who worked for him, 1 year out of apprenticeship built a mansion about a mile down the road from me, as you do. I spent the boom quietly pottering away at my little business, head down, trying not to beat myself up as to where the feck I was going wrong not to have all that fancy stuff. Ah well.

    Oh yeah, they're both fecked now and don't have an arse in their trousers- which is actually not somthing I derive any pleasure from at all, I'm not a begrudger and always thought "fair play" when they were flying it, I try my best to throw work their way whenever I have it to spare to give them a dig out. I'm still head down, wondering why I don't have any of that fancy stuff though..


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,103 ✭✭✭promethius


    omahaid wrote: »
    Riding is cheap!

    ever buy nappies?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,497 ✭✭✭omahaid


    promethius wrote: »
    ever buy nappies?

    Ever buy contraception?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 829 ✭✭✭nino1


    ad83 wrote: »
    . I have a friend who now has partner and a baby living in his one bedroom I have a schoolfriend who bought a house around the end of his apprenticeship as a carpenter for 900k which is now valued at 350. Doesnt speak a word of it.

    If he doesn't speak a word of it then how do you know about it?!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,149 ✭✭✭skyhighflyer


    Honestly, I think the smugness of the post-tiger generation is almost worse than the era itself.

    It ended 6 years ago, GET OVER IT PEOPLE :mad:

    People seem to be taking an almost sadistic delight in hearing about negative equity, mortgage arrears, etc, probably sitting in their flatshare, masturbating furiously over their laptops to stories of negative equity and trying not to wake up the other housemates. All the while attributing to themselves Promethean levels of foresight for not buying a house during the boom (although, like me, they probably never had money to buy one at the time anyway). Get over it FFS.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,219 ✭✭✭woodoo


    Honestly, I think the smugness of the post-tiger generation is almost worse than the era itself.

    It ended 6 years ago, GET OVER IT PEOPLE :mad:

    People seem to be taking an almost sadistic delight in hearing about negative equity, mortgage arrears, etc, probably sitting in their flatshare, masturbating furiously over their laptops to stories of negative equity and trying not to wake up the other housemates. All the while attributing to themselves Promethean levels of foresight for not buying a house during the boom (although, like me, they probably never had money to buy one at the time anyway). Get over it FFS.

    A good point was made earlier the boom gloaters and the bust gloaters are two cheeks of the same arse.. **** really.

    I'm not in negative equity btw.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,239 ✭✭✭lima


    Honestly, I think the smugness of the post-tiger generation is almost worse than the era itself.

    It ended 6 years ago, GET OVER IT PEOPLE :mad:

    People seem to be taking an almost sadistic delight in hearing about negative equity, mortgage arrears, etc, probably sitting in their flatshare, masturbating furiously over their laptops to stories of negative equity and trying not to wake up the other housemates. All the while attributing to themselves Promethean levels of foresight for not buying a house during the boom (although, like me, they probably never had money to buy one at the time anyway). Get over it FFS.

    I had enough money, I have more than enough money now, but still I think prices are way too high, kept propped up by vested interests. I am not in a flatshare, I do however look at askaboutmoney the odd time to see how lucky I am not to be one of those in NE. And also to learn from their mistakes.

    You played a game y'all and you lost, and us merely mentioning that fact makes us w*nkers? Pfff.. you lot do not have my sympathy in that case. Especially because some of you are trying to get me (as a taxpayer) to pay for debt writeoff of some of your mortgage? pfff again.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,180 ✭✭✭✭jimgoose


    And as usual the Irish give it the full Tinker's Wedding and fight among themselves. Gwan the winner! Red Will Danagher versus the Yank!! :D:D:D


  • Registered Users Posts: 43 y0pperz


    lima wrote: »
    I had enough money, I have more than enough money now, but still I think prices are way too high, kept propped up by vested interests. I am not in a flatshare, I do however look at askaboutmoney the odd time to see how lucky I am not to be one of those in NE. And also to learn from their mistakes.

    You played a game y'all and you lost, and us merely mentioning that fact makes us w*nkers? Pfff.. you lot do not have my sympathy in that case. Especially because some of you are trying to get me (as a taxpayer) to pay for debt writeoff of some of your mortgage? pfff again.

    Pfff


Advertisement