mcsean2163 wrote: » I've been hoping to find commercial space in Dublin for an office/ workshop and there's little or nothing available. Does anyone know when all this cheap office space is going to hit the market that McWilliams is talking about?https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/david-mcwilliams-it-is-time-for-a-major-property-reset-1.4329527?mode=amp
PropQueries wrote: » There's probably far more than 22 apartments asking in that price range. For example, if there are 20 two-beds for rent in the one block, they only advertise one on Daft as they're all similar, but there's really 20 for rent.
PropQueries wrote: » The rentals on Daft haven't been a reliable guide of the true supply for the past few years due to the build-to-rent companies only advertising one of each specific unit, even though there may be another 10 similar units available to rent. Also, many people these days source rental accommodation through watsapp, facebook groups etc., so the Daft reports may be under-counting the true supply by at least a 1,000 units a month.
JJJackal wrote: » These are the numbers that are definitely available. On further inspection 2 properties appear to be hotel rooms in the Intercontinental Number 1 Residences has 5 properties (these are the extremely expensive ones) - the link to their website appears broken. There maybe more here for sure Every other property is likely a one off rental
The Belly wrote: » intercontinental which was the 4 seasons is probably under pressure.
tigger123 wrote: That 250k isnt going to change much, recession or not. The people hoarding the land aren't going to bother selling it or developing on it until the margins are there to make it worthwhile.
PropQueries wrote: According the latest the real cost of building a home from the SCSI, it costs c. €180,000 to build a 114 sq.m. house in Dublin, including all site development costs:
fliball123 wrote: Well where else will they get a guaranteed 6-8% ROI backed by the government. I think its a no brainier to have a rock solid return ongoing with other risk strategies as well as our government looking after the maintenance, can you show me somewhere else giving back the same return (state guaranteed)
fliball123 wrote: Remember the government are not in for a profit they are looking to house people and according to all the lefties there currently is not enough houses either for sale or rent so I cant see them dropping anything any time soon as long as the lefties keep up the emotional blackmail
fliball123 wrote: We have been over 200 billion in debt since 2010/11 and no one has stopped lending us money we are now getting it at a much lower rate and when money dries up then the lads just print more which is currently happening
fliball123 wrote: Do these guys not have to pay for electricity?
PropQueries wrote: That's true. The government seems to think all us oldies want our homes to keep increasing for ever. The problem is that our generation (even the ones without kids) are going to pay for it, one way or the other. For example, I read an article recently where the report recommended increasing the pension age to 75.
MacronvFrugals wrote: Remember i said about a guy i knew who borrowed off his parents an extra 20k to secure a deal on a house him and his partner were looking at to get it through quickly while mortgage approval was available, well he got notice yesterday that those rumored job loses will include him in the next month or so but the mortgage is sealed and they got the keys recently.
ebayissues wrote: As I've been told over and over on this thread, it's better to be jobless in your own house than being jobless whilst renting.
schmittel wrote: Having let it get this bad it is actually a perfect rational decision for people to say feck it, if you can't beat them join them, we'll take the mortgage, worst case scenario is we'll just stop paying it and sure if we play the game the house will not be repossessed.
Hubertj wrote: If employment levels are high why has productivity fallen so much.
Pelezico wrote: There must be a lot of rejections.
fliball123 wrote: then why have prices not dropped? We have seen demand/access to credit coming down? If you dont think supply is the answer then you seriously need to back to economics class.
JJJackal wrote: » Its not particularly full tonight as I tried to book a room to see. I could book >76 rooms
brisan wrote: » Well according to the FED it’s the worst recession since the crash of 1920 The central Bank of England is saying it will be the worst recession in 300 years The Irish Central Bank says the worst recession since the foundation of the state The ECB saying the worst recession in peacetime in the last 100 years Someone somewhere is doing the maths and is either totally off the mark or bang on the money.
Iceman29 wrote: » 100%.... I just can't understand that people seem to forget this is by far the biggest thing we'll ever see in our lifetime. I was on staycation there last week and some of the towns were reasonably busy..... Until it started to drizzle, then all hell broke lose. Nobody in cafes/shops/pubs etc due to social distancing. Some of these places were doing OK while the sun shines but unfortunately after Sept in Ireland it rains alot. I can see alot more empty shop fronts very very soon. The city/towns we know it have finished unfortunately and its game over for so many businesses
Bass Reeves wrote: » and it not going to effect me so I can buy a house:rolleyes:
cubatahavana wrote: » City center will take a hit, especially retail, but to say it is dead is an overstatement. A vaccine will come and things will improve. Not all sectors will be equally affected. Look at the likes of Facebook with all the increased activity. Healthcare services such as doctors, consultants, nurses, hospital and pharmacies will continue to be indispensable. Banks will continue to operate, pubs, restaurants and retail will continue to operate as well, but only after the vaccine they’ll be able to return to normal. Some will be closed as they won’t survive and good people will lose their jobs. This doesn’t mean that everyone will be affected the same way. Some people are still able to afford buying a home.
Iceman29 wrote: » City Centre is completely dead in my opinion and also other people who run restaurants /pubs. When were you in there last and what time of the day? Agree, some jobs will be safe obviously but that's few and far between. A vaccine is a long way away unfortunately. Joe bloggs who has opened a cafe in town can't afford to wait around for the vaccine or for good sunny weather. Rents are sky high in Dublin, wages are expensive, and their organic coffee beans that they've been selling don't come cheap too along with light, heat, insurance etc etc. This all leads to suppliers getting burnt, rent not paid and shops closing down. People losing their jobs, and people who took a punt on a business declaring bankrupt etc. Banks of course continue to loan but to very few I feel when the **** hits the fan. Once biten twice shy and all that. Pubs restaurants and retail (not to mention all the companies on the Covid payments) will all take massive massive hits. Very few will survive without massive help but id be thinking the money will dry up very soon.
Bass Reeves wrote: » People posting that this is the biggest recession since 1928 or biggest in history or biggest in last 40-50 years are forgetting about the nature of it. They are also forget about government's reactions to it. First off technically it not a recession yet and it may never be one. It was a sharp downturn for 90 days but the economy has probably grown in this quarter. The falloff in economic output was as shary as 1928 or an time in history but recovery is sharp. With the exception of pubs and restaurants most economic activities are returning to some level of output. The other factor is governments reaction. The rich western countries are pumping money into the economy the EU is pumping 750 billion and on top of that EU states are pumping in money themselves. Ireland will pump 7-10 billion into the economy. These financial weapons were not used in 1928
Cyrus wrote: » If you take your opinion to it’s logical conclusion the world is over basically . Is that what you think is going to happen ? If there is no vaccine is that it ?
smurgen wrote: » Capitalism is changed now indefinitely. I said it before and I'll say it again.house prices will fall here in the short , medium and long run. My outlook on house prices is bearish. I'm trying to manage costs to be as low as possible now. When I buy I think prices will continue to fall. We've gone off a cliff and momentum is carrying us forward. Soon gravity will kick in.
Hubertj wrote: » What do you mean by long run? Property prices will fall forever? That doesn’t make sense. I think there will be decreases in prices over short to medium term (I think medium terms is 24-30 months).
smurgen wrote: » I mean I don't see anything that will return to growth that we seen. We'll have population growth but it will be offset by emigration or foreign workers returning home. I can't see the multinationals hiring here like they did. And I can see them allowing more jobs to move overseas. The US multinationals are onshoring their operations and well as tax. Many others are going to switch to work from anywhere eventually.
PropQueries wrote: » In the Sunday Business Post today, a student accommodation provider down near the Three Arena in Dublin is seeking planning permission to rent 599 bed spaces to non students. That's the equivalent of 300 two-bed apartments entering the regular residential market that would normally take up to 24 months to build. The article link is here: https://www.businesspost.ie/residential/plan-to-lease-student-digs-to-others-is-slated-as-co-living-by-the-back-door-b14628f6
Hubertj wrote: » Why do the SF muppets dislike co living developments so much? They work great in other countries.
The_Conductor wrote: » As short term accommodation solutions- often while residents (who aren't tenants) are seeking alternate more long term accommodation that better suits their needs. In a lot of cases it also caters to a transient workforce who don't know how long they may be working in a particular location and do not wish to put down roots. Certainly, it has a place in the accommodation mix- but it shouldn't be sold as something it patently is not- and it also should be appropriately priced- cognisant of the fact that the residents do not have the rights that a tenant would have.
Iceman29 wrote: » Is that what I said Cyrus? You seem to read people's posts and go off on your own tangent. Maybe read it a few times and see if you understand what was said before you hit the reply button. I'm sure life will go on for alot but the majority of businesses are done with that are barely keeping their head above water.