JimmyVik wrote: » I just dont see why anyone would get into it.
JimmyVik wrote: » I actually know some of them. I worked in Tokyo for a year in 2017. Spoke about this often with workmates. The said they had it hard for a few years, but things are fine there now. Also I think Ireland Ireland had worse in the last one than they ever had it. Hotels there are definitely better value than Ireland. And rent is reasonable enough too. Give me another example though. How many developed economies in the world can we say have had a crash and not recovered prices for 20 years.
ittakestwo wrote: » I did give you an example... prices today in Japan are c. 40% below what they were in 1990
JimmyVik wrote: » Or someone who is plunged back into negative equity when they were nearly out and now cant sell. My bet is there wont get any new blood into buy to let. Nobody with any financial cop on would sink money into buy to let now. All you will have is the ones who were already stuck with it. And then you have the REITs. I think that will grow and they should be taxed at the same rate as normal landords.
GreeBo wrote: » If all house prices drop by 10% then I gain by selling my 750K house and buying a 1M house.
GreeBo wrote: » Why would you not get in if houseprices take a 30-50% cut? not necessarily for rental yields, but as a pension top up?
JimmyVik wrote: » Do some calculations and figure out how much debt you will have vs how much will be in your pocket at the end of each year. Would that be worth it to you, no matter what the price of the property. And bear in mind rules may change and history tells us, not in favour of a landlord.
GreeBo wrote: » Long term asset appreciation, which is made considerably easier if you buy during a "recession" as people are predicting (on here) If I have 200K sitting in the bank, I buy a 400K house for 350 and pay 1K a month in mortgage over 20 years. That 50K saving on the price pays a lot of mortage and any rental income goes on top. Even if I only break even I have an asset that will be worth more than 350K in 20 years (it will likely be worth more than that in 3-5 years)
GreeBo wrote: » are they? I posted this earlier:https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Markets/Property/Tokyo-property-prices-near-bubble-era-levels Where are you getting your 40% from?
fliball123 wrote: » Maybe but its a viable option for some who don't want to take a hair cut on the price they might get and with an option of renting 5 months at a time and then giving the tenant a free day and then going another 5 months it puts an end to all this bullsh1t of 90 days notice if you want them out. It is only 28 days which is a bit more reasonable. So when the market bounces back maybe in 2, 3, 4, 5 years your ready to sell at a nice profit and with knowledge that mr tenant has paid a significant amount or even all your mortgage for you in that period
fliball123 wrote: » Why do you reckon the price of housing will rise under this model?
I also said when the person gets to pension age they could be paying the mortgage anywhere from 20 to 50 years there should be some equity in the house,
if the house still has a mortgage the person kids have the choice of taking on the rest of the mortgage and if they dont the house gets sold and the person gets their equity.
I put this up as an outside the box thinking for those who are locked out of the market. Also can you or anyone else show me one location where property prices are less now than they were 50 years ago?
GreeBo wrote: » I already said its not about increasing income, its about increasing wealth.
Claw Hammer wrote: » All very well until the RTB decides your free day is an attempt to circumvent or contract out of the legislation and there has been a continuous tenancy all along. This has caused issues before with commercial tenants.
pearcider wrote: » Wow the bulls are recommending 50 year mortgages now. Never mind the interest rate risk you are assuming. If interest rates rise, then you’re dead in the water. I would say again you won’t need a 50 year mortgage where we’re going.
fliball123 wrote: » Supply is falling just as quickly as demand
JimmyVik wrote: » I am in the high tax bracket. Im comfortable on what I make. I dont even do overtime when asked because of how much the tax man takes. Its not worth it to me. If he took less then yes i would do it. No way in hell would I put up hundreds of thousands on a buy to let at the amount of tax i would be paying on profits. If there even were any profits. Its a calculation that just doesnt not work out when I do it. High risk, very low reward, and goal posts movign every 6 months, never in your favour. I just dont see why anyone would get into it.
FVP3 wrote: » Yeh, ok, but let me reiterate what I said. Landlords don't pay 51% tax. There isn't a special landlord tax, theres an income tax. Some landlords can even have more than one property and not pay 51%. In fact older landlords often come into that category.
JimmyVik wrote: » I meant do you have more than one country crashing with an advanced economy in the whole world? And Japan is a cracking place now. Eathquakes, tsunamis, nuclear meltdowns, typhoons and and of course a huge property crash. I think theyve done well. Love the place.
fliball123 wrote: » Well the wheels turn slow and with the current situation where some tenants are legging it without holding up their end of the contract I cant see it happening. The current structure is almost unworkable being a landlor and at a push if they do change the legislation they could simple do rentals for 5 months and 28 days and then get a new tenant in. There will always be escape mechanism for those who dont want to be under the thumb of the tenant
JimmyVik wrote: » And we all just have a heap of money sitting around that we are going to throw into that risky proposition, when there is the mother of all recessions getting underway. I think i'll leave that kind of risk to others. And I dont see too many others taking it tbh
FVP3 wrote: » This is pretty simple. Let's imagine you want to buy a house in an estate but the cheapest house is 200k. Let's say the 30 year mortgage on that is 1000 per month, but you can only afford 600 per month. A 50 year mortgage is introduced for everybody and you realise that you can now get a mortgage of 200k or more at that monthly payment, so you bid the 200k. Since buying a property is a bidding war you are now competing with the guy who could pay 1000 pm before. Pretty soon you will hit your limit and the person who can pay 1000 will end up paying 1000 again, because he is competing for that house with people who can nearly pay that per month. It's not unlike reducing interest rates and assuming that more people can buy houses. To put it simply if there are 50 houses for sale and 100 buyers only 50 people can afford the houses, making the payments cheaper will just push prices up. Equity in the house butter no parsnips. The house would either have to be sold and they would have to go into the rental sector, or keep paying a mortgage. Imagine having to do that now. Kids inherit properties anyway, I don't think they want a mortgage attached. Irrelevant to the cost of a 50 year old mortgage when you are 80. Nobody wants outgoings like that when they are retired.
Greyian wrote: » You keep saying this and using MyHome as a reference. You said yesterday there were 19013 properties showing up for sale on MyHome. When I look now, there are 19015 properties showing up. Has there been a boom in supply in the past 24 hours?!?!?! Saying supply is falling quickly (or rising quickly) based on a change of a few units (or few dozen units) is madness. Over half a million people have become unemployed in the past few weeks. Others have suffered paycuts (in some cases, quite large ones). A couple of units of fluctation in terms of the number of properties on MyHome is meaningless (and completely normal anyway). We won't know exactly what supply and demand will be like next month, in 3 months time, in 6 months time, but what we do know is that there has been absolutely devastation in terms of a huge number of peoples financial standing, which will inevitably cause a sizeable drop in demand.
Deleted User wrote: » Yeah they can stick their 50 year mortgages where the sun dont shine. Prices need to be affordable. We are a small island with a small population. Housing should not ge the mess it is.
FVP3 wrote: » I'd reduce mortgages to 20 years if I could.
ittakestwo wrote: » https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/japan/real-residential-property-price-index