Pelezico wrote: » I am not sure what you have proved. I just looked up a price fall on myhome a few minutes ago. Ede*nmore Avenue...Raheny. looks like a loss to me.
Mic 1972 wrote: » one single property reducing asking price that's your evidence of prices falling?
schmittel wrote: » Some of the geniuses on here are not convinced by the accuracy of CSO data.
fliball123 wrote: » Ah i have tried Mc I showed them the PPR dataset which shows that May prices dropped but in June and July they rebounded above 2018 prices but alas they refuse to look at the most up to date data set which is not the CSO, I wonder what their excuse will be when the next CSO report comes out and shows that prices rebounded in the Summer months.
Hubertj wrote: » I do think the reduced volumes over the last few months, while maintaining price levels, do have the possibility to skew trends. Under current situation how relevant is YoY for March 2020 onwards? So many variables
fliball123 wrote: » Maybe Hubert but their is a difference to peoples approach. I don't think prices are going to fall by more than 2-5% and it may happen in the next 6 months (as you say lots of variables such as world economy, brexit, corona, etc) but I would never tell anyone to not buy now because they may save money or to sell now before people lose too much..On the other side if I thought prices were going to go up I would never tell them to buy or sell either. But you can bet there has been people on here who would of bought months ago only for the army of armchair "price drop wanters" spinning a yarn that the market has collapsed and that only fools would buy now and some people have put off buying only to see that property that they were going to buy taken by someone else.
Pelezico wrote: » We are all entitled to our opinions. I am only too pleased that my son was gazumped in February. What he sees convinces him.that it was a blessing in disguise.
Vikings wrote: » If prices were guaranteed to drop 1% per year for the next 30 years, at what point would you be recommending your son leave the nest and buy somewhere of his own? Genuine question here.
Hubertj wrote: » You’d want to be some loser taking advice of randomers on the internet about the largest purchase of your life.
christin wrote: » Interesting article: Boom followed by a bust? Housing market pick-up ‘may be short-lived’https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.independent.ie/world-news/boom-followed-by-a-bust-housing-market-pick-up-may-be-short-lived-39445680.html
JJJackal wrote: » National: In January 2018 the RPPI was 126.5; in May 2020 it was 134.1 Dublin: In January 2018 the RPPI was 121.8; in May 2020 it was 124.1 National: In January 2018 the RPPI was 131.3; in May 2020 it was 145 You can of course pick points that are the absolute peak which will show a decline. Looking at the graphs they look stable enough for 2 years
The great reset will change the face of our cities. With more people eventually living in the centre as a result of mass conversion from commercial to residential, the cities will become much more pleasant places to work, rest and play. Lower rents will facilitate quirkier, more unique retail, rather than boring big multiples. Fewer cars will also change the atmosphere. Who knows, post-Covid-19, underground car parks might morph into underground clubs, giving the young a proper European-style nightlife.
Assetbacked wrote: Irish Life owns a large cohort of the buildings on Grafton St, presumably some pension money. I'd be pulling my cash of I had such a risky pension investment.
Assetbacked wrote: » https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/david-mcwilliams-it-is-time-for-a-major-property-reset-1.4329527?mode=amp. McWilliams in today's IT going back to the property market, introducing the article with "Prepare for carnage in commercial property". He talks about Ireland's commercial rents being substantially higher than other European cities and therefore one could conclude that they are "spectacularly overvalued". However, due to the huge increase in property values, yields are only 4%. He thinks that the move to WFH, accelerated by covid, will have a dramatic effect on commercial property values considering the cost of renting the commercial premises. There is also a comment about how retail in Dublin city centre is dead as Dublin does not have the vibrant city centre you would think when there's throngs of tourists and office workers as not a lot of people live in the city centre. His grand conclusion; Irish Life owns a large cohort of the buildings on Grafton St, presumably some pension money. I'd be pulling my cash of I had such a risky pension investment. https://www.irishlifecorporatebusiness.ie/irish-life-set-buy-its-19th-building-grafton-street
ebayissues wrote: » I'm still not convinced that WFH will change drastically. if covid is here to stay maybe. but vaccinee hopefully should be out in 2yrs time and things will be back to normal. When this happens, WFH would be once/twice per week. Do you think that its the existing office spaces that will be transformed to residential dwelling? How easy is it to do so?
Ush1 wrote: » You get the location.
Bass Reeves wrote: » Converting commercial space to residential will not happen today or tomorrow. It will take 5+years if it started tomorrow. Even converting Georgian buildings that are office to residential would take 2-3years. Even then with Brexit issues will demand for existing office space hold if companies want an EU location. McWilliams theory on massive changes in the structure and make up of the city center would take 15-20 years. Converting to different uses often costs as much as new builds. His theory on underground carparks being converted to night clubs is just a radical proposal to highlight change. Most car parks are.multistory anyway. Most have relatively low ceiling so if not used as CP they be knocked. McWilliams prediction would be more likely tocause more a slow 1-2% decline in rental and residential property prices over 20years than a sudden drop if it caused a drop at all as reconfiguration costs money as well
PropQueries wrote: » How will this impact the cohort of first-time buyers reliant on the bank of mom and dad for deposits? If the parents pension fund is invested in property funds and their pension fund is now expected to worth much less than they thought and then the Government starts to take an ever bigger share of the family home under the fair deal scheme, which means little left for an actual inheritance, will the parents become more reluctant or unable to help out their kids going forward?
PropQueries wrote: » How will this impact the cohort of first-time buyers reliant on the bank of mom and dad for deposits? ?
Pelezico wrote: » David McWilliams is a pop star economist. He is there to sell a story...not deliver any meaningful economic advice.or insights.