cruizer101 wrote: » A lot of it comes down to where you are in life also, if you are young enough and just kind of considering it there might be no harm is waiting a bit to see what might happen, during the last boom a lot of young people were encouraged to get on the property ladder as soon as possible which was bad advice. But if you older and planning starting family in near future at all, may as well buy when you find a house you like. So what if prices go down you should only be buying a house you would be happy to live in for the forseeable future anyway so once you can manage they payments the value doesn't really matter. A house is much more than an investment it is your home.
SNNUS wrote: » smurgen wrote: » When people start to talk with such certainty you know it's time to wait and see rather than make a foolish move. You are the one talking with such certainty surely?
smurgen wrote: » When people start to talk with such certainty you know it's time to wait and see rather than make a foolish move.
gct wrote: » Everyone will go through rough patches as a homeowner what with interest rates changing, negative equity etc. but the upside is in 25 years no more mortgage and no more rent. Do You really want to be a pensioner still struggling to pay ever increasing rents on a meagre pension?
smurgen wrote: » But if you but at the wrong time you will spend years paying off.excess mortgage interest before making a dent in the principle
awec wrote: » The thing people never seem to grasp is the reason property is cheap during a "crash" is because it's really difficult to buy. Ultimately the price of property is determined by the availability of buyers. Also people seem to be predicting the extremes. What we saw in 2007 was absolutely exceptional, with huge percentage drops in property prices. Every time the media talk about a slow down, or a drop in prices, people seem to think we'll be seeing 2007 all over again. Much more likely, IMO, is that supply eventually catches up and we see prices level off and very gradually start to come down. But this is years away.
GingerLily wrote: » smurgen wrote: » But if you but at the wrong time you will spend years paying off.excess mortgage interest before making a dent in the principle Not if your mortgage is similar to rent anyway - my three bed semi house costs me only 100e more than my 1bed apartment to rent - there's a cost to not buying too!
smurgen wrote: » If you lose your job you can move when renting though.i suppose now you can just post keys back to the bank.
GingerLily wrote: » smurgen wrote: » If you lose your job you can move when renting though.i suppose now you can just post keys back to the bank. And where would I live? I have more rights as a mortgage owner if I try engage with that bank then I would as a renter. And I can rent out the two spare rooms - 14k a year tax free, that would cover most of the mortgage. Edit to add - it's not an ideal situation but when is losing your job ever easy?
smurgen wrote: » If the economy collapses you won't have demand on your rental property.you'll ne paying that mortage alone.
Mike Hoch wrote: » There is no viable reason that house prices will dramatically fall at any time soon. We will reach a stage where they will plateau. More new homes built = the plateauing or slight decline in the value of existing homes. It has started to happen already, and I'd imagine it will become more obvious in the next 18 months to 2 years. Brexit will have zero negative impact on the Irish economy trade wise. There is no impending economic crash. It's a baseless conspiracy theory peddled by Gemma O'Doherty, Ruth Coppinger, and various other economic illiterates from the moan and whinge parties, as without an economic crisis or a housing crisis these snake oil merchants have no pitch to sell. Ireland has close to ten years of backlogged construction to initiate, and it has only picked up a steady pace since last year. There will be a building boom, but a within our means building boom. As long as the 3.5 income to lending rule is kept there is no reason to see an explosion in house prices.
awec wrote: » smurgen wrote: » If the economy collapses you won't have demand on your rental property.you'll ne paying that mortage alone. If the economy collapses there will be much bigger issues than her mortgage.
RisingDamp wrote: » What are peoples thoughts on the market stability? Is it crazy to buy now when the value of the property could be flattened by 2020?
LuckyLloyd wrote: » I think the issue is Brexit and Nationalist economic game playing by the States and China might force a negative jobs reaction that affects Ireland square in the jaw. In that scenario: a) demand will significantly deteriorate b) someone buying now may be on the hook for a mortgage in a declining market while out of work themselves or taking employment at less than their current salary The fact of the property market itself don't necessarily matter in such a context. It won't be a 'property bubble', but prices will be tumbling all the same. You could lock yourself in at a bad price with no flexibility to up sticks and move when you need it the most. The other side as pointed out in this thread is of course that you have to live somewhere and if you can afford the price of something that fits your needs long term go on ahead. I think the reality is most buyers are working off the min deposit and the max borrowings available compared to their income so those people are - by default - stretching themselves. If you held a strong deposit relative to what you wanted to buy and were borrowing less than the max for something that you really like, go for it. But in that scenario you are particularly primed to benefit from a drop off in prices. Typically that's not the case though.
smurgen wrote: » I genuinely feel like estate agents etc post here to quash any negative talk.massive concerns are dismissed at a whim.
Samuel T. Cogley wrote: » If you can get a house you can live in for 20 years + at a reasonable mortgage relative to your income go for it. Negativce equity/massive posative equity is cyclical and only effects you if you need to move.
DubCount wrote: » Buying a house to live in is not a typical investment. (...) If prices go down, so what, if you can still afford the mortgage and live where you want to live, what difference does it make.