Sloppy_Joe wrote: » Do you know what caused the crash? Sub prime lending in the US - lending given to people who have no credit history and are going to fail to pay their loans back. We have a whole generation paying insane rents - well able to pay a mortgage. It's not like I'm claiming college grads should be getting 100% mortgages like they were! Whoever does have a mortgage, if they lose their job they won't be able to pay their mortgage either. So the result on the owner is the same whether its 5x or 3.5x It's funny that the US did nothing to prevent the same thing happening again over there, so is there going to be another crash???
Sloppy_Joe wrote: » It's funny that the US did nothing to prevent the same thing happening again over there, so is there going to be another crash???
cruizer101 wrote: » So lets say you as a couple are earning 100k currently you can get a mortgage for 350k and purchase house for ~385k based on 10% deposit. CB change rules so now it is 4.5 multiple. You can now get mortgage for 450k and buy house for ~495k, assuming you have extra deposit amount. But so can everyone else, so that house that was priced at 380k has now risen to 490k and you are still in a bidding war with the same people as you would be if rules just stayed the same. When eveyones purchasing power goes up so does the value of the items they want to buy.
Mic 1972 wrote: » Lending more money is only going to increase house prices, it will do nothing to increase supply.
Marius34 wrote: » That's not entirely true. Lending more money it would increase house price, but it would also increase supply. Price increase/decrease well correlate with a delayed supply increase/decrease. Same happened during the boom, property construction when the property price skyrocketed in 2005-2007 was massive. Back in previous bubble, the population grew even faster, but due to the high property price which caused massive construction, rents were reasonable.
Mic 1972 wrote: » That's right, property construction skyrocketed out of control inflated by borrowed money. Recipe for disaster. Nobody wants that, starting from builders and investors. People need to be patient, keep saving money and buy a house when you can afford it. Supply will be there
dontparkhere wrote: » So would an increase in borrowing boost construction and supply? How do the Irish LTV rules compare to the rest of Europe. They seem quite stringent compared to the uk.
Sloppy_Joe wrote: » Whoever does have a mortgage, if they lose their job they won't be able to pay their mortgage either. So the result on the owner is the same whether its 5x or 3.5x
aloooof wrote: » This really isn't the same at all. Take a couple who earn a combined 100k, and one loses their job shortly after drawdown. - With 3.5x and LTV of 90% their debt is 350k on an asset worth 385k. - With 5x and a 100% mortgage their debt is 500k on as asset worth 500k. The former scenario is objectively better for both the couple AND the bank.
Blowfish wrote: » In addition to that, the multiple limitation is not just about job losses. During the recession, average incomes went down. This means that a huge number of people either took a paycut or lost their job and picked up another one which paid less. In a scenario where you lose 5-10% income, repayments on a 3.5x multiple could be survivable with a bit of belt tightening. A 5x multiple though would be much tougher to keep up payments with.
Mickiemcfist wrote: » If this thread has taught me anything, it's that even with the knowledge of what happened in the recession, people still don't know what's best for them. Thankfully the Central bank has got a handle on things this time around. We could still have a recession & property crash, but as said above, I'd rather be exposed to that at 3.5x than 5x.
JJJackal wrote: » Also as said if there is a recession, it is likely that the 3.5X customer will have debt >3.5X due to decreased earnings... And the house will be worth the same or less than what was paid for it
alwald wrote: » Any source(s) to check the accuracy of your statement?
Sloppy_Joe wrote: » Builders are literally walking away from jobs because they can't make profit on it...
Sloppy_Joe wrote: » https://www.inc.com/dustin-mckissen/subprime-mortgages-are-back-will-that-mean-another-recession.html
Hi Kemil, they need to remain a tightly regulated tool
Mic 1972 wrote: » says who?
Bluefoam wrote: » From your own quoted article... you seem to be all over the place on this stuff.
Sloppy_Joe wrote: » That's an opinion, not a policy. Tell me, did the US put a 3.5 times a salary limit on their borrowings?
JJJackal wrote: » What difference does it make to us if the us put a 3.5 times salary limit? If you cant pay for your home in the US they will take it off you
Sloppy_Joe wrote: » Were they not taken off people in 08? Are you saying they won't take your house off you here and thus the size of the mortgage doesn't matter and the banks only protecting itself with these rules?
JJJackal wrote: » Banks are a business - they have to protect themselves. Do you think the banks should give everyone who comes in whatever amount of money they want? And yes banks should only lend to a person what they think the person can pay back
We were flying for a few years, but then the property crash came. The first sign I saw of it turning was when we had a big house in Celbridge and it went for €50,000 to €60,000 over the guide price.The bank said, “This is a crazy price you have achieved on this property and we cannot lend this money. This house is not worth the sale agreed price.” It just spiralled unbelievably after that.