Assetbacked wrote: » I was going off news articles for the tech jobs.https://www.thejournal.ie/airbnb-job-losses-2-5113453-Jun2020/https://www.consulting.us/news/4776/global-consulting-firm-accenture-is-firing-25000-employeeshttps://www.businesspost.ie/coronavirus/ida-ireland-contacts-multinationals-over-covid-19-job-losses-806a2f34https://www.rte.ie/news/business/2020/0721/1154572-linkedin-to-cut-960-jobs-globally/
Smiley11 wrote: » Not that strict actually. We love Blackrock too. I fully accept that we'll have to compromise on some aspects but there are some things that I really want & will hold out for. I think most people do the same but I'm open to correction.
Smiley11 wrote: » Have to agree. We had to walk from a bidding war recently & I think it'll take me a while to get over how frenzied it was. I certainly won't be bidding again any time soon! The house was amazing but I'd give a laymans estimate of having to put a minimum of 150k into it to make it what we wanted. I was told last week a friend of a friend had been quoted nearly 220k to renovate it! We were at 550k & while it still wasn't at its inflated asking price, my husband just asked if I actually wanted to pay that much for a house in that condition &, as much as I adored it, my heart said no. Couldn't justify that spend & even though it will always be the one that got away, I can't see us regretting our decision. People seem desperate & I can't be a part of this current market so we'll bow out for a few months. The truth is that not one of us on this forum know what way the property market will pan out over the next couple of years. Personally, if the right house comes up when this current frenzy calms, we'll be buying. The value of our home doesn't matter to us as we'll never be moving again. My uneducated opinion on the market is that it will drop, but not by some of the crazy percentages floating around here! 10 to 15% I'd guess but it will take some time for it to happen. I'm a buyer with no chain so its in my interest for the market to bottom out but I can't see it happening. But again, none of us know.
Danny552 wrote: » You would be crazy to pay that much for those houses, they are horrible looking. would build a lovely home for half that price.
beauf wrote: » You basically have to check online the houses that have sold on the same road, see through ads and Google maps which are most similar. You'll find some are better and some are worse. Put yours in the middle. You also have to allow 20-40k that someone is going to have to hold back for refurbishing. Then also consider if the property has any added value, size of garden, aspect, location in the road, expansion potential.
brisan wrote: » Or ring 3 EA and get free valuations
Pelezico wrote: » Not sure how a poll is relevant to the housing market.
enricoh wrote: » If sinn fein are flying in the polls I'd expect the government to keep shoveling money at the foreva home brigade, extend eviction ban etc etc . The big bad landlord might be in the crosshairs for raising a few quid off also! I doubt their would be any objections from the opposition!
Pelezico wrote: » Ah yes...the dream home some people here talk about. I wonder what that is...the dream home.
Taylor365 wrote: » One that's free! :pac:
Pelezico wrote: » What is free is not worth having.
MacronvFrugals wrote: » Its very very relevant, although here even macro economics isnt relevant, the housing market exists in a vaccum devoid of any other externalities some would have you believe. 18-34s are solely voting Sinn Fein en masse because of the housing market, its something a few of us here predicted, this poll provides some proof to that prediction.
Assetbacked wrote: » The 34 year olds will be 38 by the time the next election comes around. It would then be 18-38 year olds looking at SF as their main choice so it is an ever-growing voting demographic. This is, as you say, predominantly down to the housing (rental) crisis and the last 7 years of hyper economic growth. There is a disregard for SF by certain people to do with their past, likely to be of a particular age, but then at the same time a lack of appreciation for the two pronged shafting of the younger generation since '08 via (1) punitive taxes and (2) punitive housing costs. The punitive taxes pay a debt they had no hand in creating as well as paying a swollen pension bill and the punitive housing costs prop up the value of the homes owned by the older generation. I completely understand why they would vote for SF when FF and FG had a hand in (1) and (2). But the fear of SF seems to be so irrational as they are a centre-left party, not even extreme in policies. This irrational fear, should it seem likely SF will get into the next government, could manifest in a way which impacts the housing market, for example, spooking institutional investors which could mean they offload their BTLs onto individual buyers and stop building; by creating panic among home-owners who try to dump their property for fear of the housing market collapsing and the value of their home collapsing. This is why the opinion polls with SF performing so strongly are of relevance to the housing market.
Balluba wrote: » Am I right to assume that it will be the over 38’s who will have to pay up for the free houses that Sinn Fein will give to the under 38’s?
brisan wrote: » The good Friday agreement was 22 years ago Even 34 yr old's were only 12 at the time and have no recollection of the troubles up the north SF violent history on both sides of the border means little to anyone under 40