Brianmwalker wrote: » If people are holding off then prices must fall or there's no sales.
Villa05 wrote: » Best of luck. Are you in the Dublin market? Might be prudent to keep an eye on: Vaccine progress New Gov plan and delivery mechanisms on homes if any Stimulus plan WFH evolution and effects on market The propertypin discussion board, called the last crash, identified the oversupply long before it was in general media here and called the bottom of the market in Dublin and Galway markets the first to bottom
Hubertj wrote: » Propertypin - i've only looked at it for some of the drops in rental prices when people post links. You're saying there are discussion boards similar to here? Are they named analysts/experts? Or random punters on the internet like here? If they are random punters are you honestly saying someone should take advice on purchasing a property from a randomer on the internet?
Hubertj wrote: Propertypin - i've only looked at it for some of the drops in rental prices when people post links. You're saying there are discussion boards similar to here? Are they named analysts/experts? Or random punters on the internet like here? If they are random punters are you honestly saying someone should take advice on purchasing a property from a randomer on the internet?
Hubertj wrote: If they are random punters are you honestly saying someone should take advice on purchasing a property from a randomer on the internet?
JimmyVik wrote: » If I see drops of 10% thats my trigger point. Im buying then, if there is any supply. Too long have I waited Time to get off the fence
Augeo wrote: » I doubt plenty buyers are in that position tbh €4000 net wage/month and €600 mortgage payment...... €2000 net wage/month and €300 mortgage payment......
ShedTower wrote: » I think many forget that there was an argument long before Covid strunk that we were approaching a downturn. Globally, interest rates continue to go lower and lower. A couple of months before the virus we had a Danish bank offering negative interest mortgage. Paying you to take a mortgage! Others offering 0% mortgages. Strange times. What will money be worth in 5 years, 10 years? There were arguments that we were witnessing the collapse of the financial system. It may not be that extreme just yet but what way was/is it going? At home we have Brexit to deal with shortly. Now it's all about the virus. And if the virus goes we'll be fine. There are other issues!
Assetbacked wrote: » For the previous 2/3 years the narrative around Irish house prices was that Brexit was stalling the market. Now perhaps there is some truth to it but it was touted as the sole reason for the "price growth slowdown"
Graham wrote: » I don't think that's accurate. I'd argue central bank lending rules have been a significant factor in keeping a cap on house prices. Pretty sure I wouldn't be alone in that line of thinking.
The Belly wrote: » It could also be argued that this cap has pushed many into the renting cycle trap and driven up RE prices and rents.
Graham wrote: » How does capping property prices cause upward pressure on rents?
Graham wrote: I'd argue central bank lending rules have been a significant factor in keeping a cap on house prices. Pretty sure I wouldn't be alone in that line of thinking.
errlloyd wrote: » LTV restrictions and deposit requirements effectively prevent any individual or couple with a family income of less than around 80k per year from ever buying near Dublin. Forcing them to continue renting.
1sttimebuyer20 wrote: » I’m sure it will, my thoughts are a 5-10% dip next year, it could be worse than that however as there is an undersupply, I can’t see it being much worse. Keep an eye on the market now, if you feel you have a good understanding of prices in the area you want and you see a house you like, just offer 10% under what you feel the pre Covid market value was. I’ve been searching in a very small km2 area since October, any 2nd hand in decent condition has gone for mad money, the only things available at decent prices are ex-rentals but I really don’t fancy doing the upgrading required
Villa05 wrote: » Local University saying students on campus for only 4 weeks per semester for the coming year. This is for food science course with strong practical element. Little demand for student accomodation
Hubertj wrote: that must be Limerick. Most other universities plan to have students on campus much more.
Hubertj wrote: » https://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/ul-says-most-students-will-be-allowed-on-campus-for-just-one-week-each-month-1.4299487 that must be Limerick. Most other universities plan to have students on campus much more.
Assetbacked wrote: » For the previous 2/3 years the narrative around Irish house prices was that Brexit was stalling the market. Now perhaps there is some truth to it but it was touted as the sole reason for the "price growth slowdown" (i.e. prices not continuing to rise and starting to decrease). Brexit happens at the end of the year and it is looking like a hard Brexit (possible even confirmed that this is happening). However, the fallout for the pandemic will be blamed into next year when prices are stalling or falling, with complete ignorance to the more pressing issues of the mismatch between prices, salaries and borrowing limits. But also, there is an ignorance to the fact supply was muted for a decade so the house price increase was to a large extent artificially inflated due to this lack of supply.
Graham wrote: » I disagree. Remove lending caps would push prices up further so they'd still be out of reach for your potential buyers.
Graham wrote: How does capping property prices cause upward pressure on rents?
errlloyd wrote: » The market would be hotter, that's for sure. But it is clearly wrong to say that making it functionally difficult for someone to buy a home would result in fewer people buying homes than making it legally impossible for them to buy a home. The increased pressure on the renting market created by the reality that there is a large cohort of people who have no other choice DEFINITELY drives up rent (which drives up the ROI on investment properties which drives up house prices anyway). It is ludicrous to suggest otherwise.
Graham wrote: » Of course limited rental supply drives up rent, no argument.