Henbabani wrote: » When we can expect to see CSO data for January/February?
Brego888 wrote: » Is there really new property not selling in West Dublin while in other parts of Dublin people are still queuing for days for some new developments?
The_Conductor wrote: » apparently 28 units still available in Shackleton Park on the Newcastle Road-
Simona1986 wrote: » What sort of units are they? I've seen examples of 3-beds in phase two of developments have large queues for them on launch day despite there being 4 and 5 beds still available from phase 1.
Henbabani wrote: » so i'm trying to understand the data released today, we're still at another 12% increase this year?
Claw Hammer wrote: » Henbabani wrote: » so i'm trying to understand the data released today, we're still at another 12% increase this year? No that was the increase last year.
Henbabani wrote: » yeah but i saw the change in January said 0.9% which means, if i understand it right. that we again going for 12% this year.
draiochtanois wrote: » This post has been deleted.
draiochtanois wrote: » I have switched to thinking that property prices have gone completely nuts: Example:https://www.daft.ie/cork/houses-for-sale/blackrock/62-woodvale-road-beaumont-blackrock-cork-1669650 It will probably sell for a good bit over asking and require another €80-100k to bring it up to spec So €500,000 for a 3 bed semi in CorkNUTS!
The_Conductor wrote: » Just wait until interest rates start to creep upwards (long term rates already are)- once the overnight rates start to hurt- mayhem is going to ensue. The only thing keeping the party going at the moment- is cheap money and a booming economy- exchequer figures are already raising some red flags in the Department of Finance (e.g. payroll taxes and excise on alcohol and tobacco- are all significantly lower than profiled). We have a day of reckoning coming- and we're not prepared for it in the least.
draiochtanois wrote: » By a good bit I mean 20 - 25 k. Extending, proper glazing, insulation, redecoration won't leave you a lot of change out of 80-100k
ArnieSilvia wrote: » The houses in Lucan area are selling very well actually. We sold ours in one week for the price we wanted to get. I would argue with The Conductor and say that Lucan is a good alternative. The new developments like Somerton, st Helens had people waiting overnight/on lists. The one estate that sells slowly is far from everything, hence people don't want it. Some houses like the ones along the railway have issues with potential noise so understandably people don't want them. I think that people need to differentiate between house like ours and the run down junk or poor location. Also, the location within Lucan area can differ - our house is close to schools and train station do commuting is easier. The same doesn't apply for many areas within same locality! Our house had lots of interest but it is very well presented, almost new, a passive house so small bills, in walk in condition, upgrades, patio, even with furniture included - so the purchaser literally walks in with suitcases and can enjoy the house immediately. Compare this with some of the houses that need work, have damp problems etc - yuck! Another thing was that we didn't use the estate agent, saving us a lot of money. We staggered the viewings so everyone had an hour to view the property thoroughly, we've shown every detail etc. The feedback we were getting from viewers was that they were shocked with the presentation compared with the usual open days with estate agents. Every viewer put an offer on the house which is telling a lot. We got a cash offer very close to the asking price which itself was set very high to avoid the dreamers without money. The house was sold after quick bidding not to the highest bidder but to the people who we felt were most capable of closing the deal. I personally feel that the prices will continue to grow, albeit at inflation rate. There will be no crash because the economy picked up in a different way compared to 2003- back then it was all about building houses and speculation, this time it's just normal jobs.
ross2010 wrote: » To say this time it's just normal jobs is very naive. Lots of those normal jobs were lost in the recession and even "safe" public sector jobs took a hit. So here we are with high prices to buy property and higher interest rates coming down the line. If anyone has a mortgage and finds it even a bit hard to pay now wait until interest rates rise and they can't make the payment.
LirW wrote: » But what about job losses due to automation? Playing devil's advocate here but why are people putting themselves hundreds of thousands as debt around their necks even though it's predicted everywhere that a lot of jobs will be gone/shift to new fields, where plenty people will be too old then to successfully retrain or simply lose their jobs? I honestly see this as a scenario that could probably cause a crisis in like 2 decades or so. While people will adapt and systems probably change, for people with mortgages it's gonna be a sh1tfest.
bigpink wrote: » If people were downsizing is this the time to sell 1st half of this year?
awec wrote: » Got en email about the Kenler development in Sandyford village this morning. Six houses total, cheapest house (the 3 bed terrace I presume) is €575,000. :pac: The houses look nice in fairness, location isn't the worst. Sandyford Village is a bit odd, there's nothing in it really. No Spar/Centra type shop within walking distance. I am curious as to who their target audience is with the prices. All houses outside the limits of the help-to-buy.