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The biggest mortgage/house devalue you heard

  • 31-08-2011 11:11PM
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 1,571 ✭✭✭7sr2z3fely84g5


    Heard a bloke on the radio other day saying his mortgage is about €1400 a month :eek:,i also know there's a lot of houses bought that are worth a lot less than their boom peak prices.

    any personal stories?.


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,466 ✭✭✭Forest Master


    Your anecdote is irrelevant without the "before" figure. DUH!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Solnskaya


    my mate bought a house for €5 and now its worth €2!!!! Poor old Fang Shueinchung, he really got it big time up the azz!!! Oh how we laughed!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,182 ✭✭✭SafeSurfer


    Heard a bloke on the radio other day saying his mortgage is about €1400 a month :eek:,i also know there's a lot of houses bought that are worth a lot less than their boom peak prices.

    any personal stories?.

    A monthly repayment of €1400 would represent a 20 year mortgage of about €230,000. Average enough in the craziness of the late noughties.

    Multo autem ad rem magis pertinet quallis tibi vide aris quam allis



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Solnskaya


    SafeSurfer wrote: »
    A monthly repayment of €1400 would represent a 20 year mortgage of about €230,000. Average enough in the craziness of the late noughties.
    well dull done with the reality check there buddy.:)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,665 ✭✭✭baldbear


    I heard of a guy whos balls are that big he once shat on them......and he had a massive mortgage for 1trillion yen.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,352 ✭✭✭naughtysmurf


    Bought first house 3 bed semi, in 1995 for £49,500 (punts) sold in 2003 for €183,500

    We bought our current house in 2003, 4bed semi d, nice area for €223,500, they are now selling for in or around €200,000, so about 2000 / 2001 levels

    Lucky enough, will never be in negitative equity but do feel sorry for those who bought in 06,07 and are now under pressure


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Solnskaya


    baldbear wrote: »
    I heard of a guy whos balls are that big he once shat on them......and he had a massive mortgage for 1trillion yen.
    you're exaggerating there, no way he had that big a mortgage. The balls thing sounds genuine though, poor fecker, sh1tty balls..nothing worse. Suffer that way a lot myself.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Solnskaya


    Bought first house 3 bed semi, in 1995 for £49,500 (punts) sold in 2003 for €183,500

    We bought our current house in 2003, 4bed semi d, nice area for €223,500, they are now selling for in or around €200,000, so about 2000 / 2001 levels

    Lucky enough, will never be in negitative equity but do feel sorry for those who bought in 06,07 and are now under pressure
    showing off a bit there eh;) Clever, very clever. We wanna hear from the poor sod with a mansion on Shrewsbury Rd, bought for €48,000,000, now worth €450,000, feck you and your measley €20K


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,352 ✭✭✭naughtysmurf


    Solnskaya wrote: »
    showing off a bit there eh;) Clever, very clever. We wanna hear from the poor sod with a mansion on Shrewsbury Rd, bought for €48,000,000, now worth €450,000, feck you and your measley €20K


    Nope, not clever just lucky, that's all, I want to hear from the poor sod on Shrewsbury Rd too


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 7,929 ✭✭✭Calibos


    Parents bought a 3 bed semi in a nice area for about €45,000 in about 92/93. Sold in late 2008 for €520,000. I really feel for the people who bought it. They must be in serious negative equity now but its not like we held a gun to their heads. I was amazed the parents got what they did because thanks to boards I already knew the writing was on the wall. When they said they were thinking of selling, I said "Do It! Do It! Do It!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 513 ✭✭✭x_Ellie_x


    My grandfather lives in Wexford, he told me his neighbours sold their farm to developers for €1.5 million 4 years ago and then brought it back from the same developers for €600,000 earlier this year. His neighbours made almost a million euro on that deal. Nice! :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,182 ✭✭✭SafeSurfer


    Reform of the bankruptcy laws is the way to go. Irish bankruptcy currently allows for an automatic discharge after 12 years and a conditional discharge after 5. The costs of availing of bankruptcy in Ireland mean it is an option only for those who can afford it which is a contradiction in terms. Banks would be much more likely to negotiate/restructure debt if customers had an option of bankruptcy as in other countries like the UK. Instead borrowers are pursued through the courts and are increasingly ending up in our overcrowded prisons.

    The medieval practice of the sheriff seizing goods and chatals of debtors and then imprisoning those who cannot meet their liabilities, at huge cost to the state must end.

    Multo autem ad rem magis pertinet quallis tibi vide aris quam allis



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Solnskaya


    SafeSurfer wrote: »
    Reform of the bankruptcy laws is the way to go. Irish bankruptcy currently allows for an automatic discharge after 12 years and a conditional discharge after 5. The costs of availing of bankruptcy in Ireland mean it is an option only for those who can afford it which is a contradiction in terms. Banks would be much more likely to negotiate/restructure debt if customers had an option of bankruptcy as in other countries like the UK. Instead borrowers are pursued through the courts and are increasingly ending up in our overcrowded prisons.

    The medieval practice of the sheriff seizing goods and chatals of debtors and then imprisoning those who cannot meet their liabilities, at huge cost to the state must end.
    yeah yeah, but what about the schadenfreud story about your mates who have a mortgage of 1.5 mil, and have to hire themselves out as sex slaves just to meet the interest????? Make the next post juicy, or else:D


  • Posts: 4,333 ✭✭✭ Lily Howling Rainfall


    Heard a bloke on the radio other day saying his mortgage is about €1400 a month :eek:,i also know there's a lot of houses bought that are worth a lot less than their boom peak prices.

    any personal stories?.

    Personally, know someone 5 million house is probably not even worth 2 now. Dont know how much the mortgage is but its still being paid. 1400 a month isnt that much for someone who earns a decent salary, its only 16800 a year. Far bigger mortgages around than that.

    Use that as as example, if you couldn't afford the house the stfu about debt forgiveness. The person I mentioned is still paying off that mortgage.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 54 ✭✭Sticjones


    Wouldn't be complete without an Alison O'Riordan quote
    If there was a competition for throwing dirty looks, I would easily have come first, for those aesthetically beautiful Grand Canal Square apartments are being offered to first-time buyers for a sickening €190,000.

    Two years ago, with help from my parents, I bought into the same sought-after riverside location in Dublin 2, but for the horrifying sum of €525,000.

    It’s such a bitter taste of defeat as I stare out my window each morning that I leave the blind down continually.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,298 ✭✭✭✭later12


    H,i also know there's a lot of houses bought that are worth a lot less than their boom peak prices.
    Go 'way.

    Link??????


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 580 ✭✭✭IPushButtons


    This house was listed at 150k about two years ago, now looking for 29k. It's in a bad area of the town so im sure that wouldn't help

    http://www.daft.ie/searchsale.daft?id=539428


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,298 ✭✭✭✭later12


    It's almost as though there has been a... a bust... you might say.

    Why has nobody been telling us about this!!!!!!!!!!!111!!!!!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,111 ✭✭✭ResearchWill


    SafeSurfer wrote: »
    Reform of the bankruptcy laws is the way to go. Irish bankruptcy currently allows for an automatic discharge after 12 years and a conditional discharge after 5. The costs of availing of bankruptcy in Ireland mean it is an option only for those who can afford it which is a contradiction in terms. Banks would be much more likely to negotiate/restructure debt if customers had an option of bankruptcy as in other countries like the UK. Instead borrowers are pursued through the courts and are increasingly ending up in our overcrowded prisons.

    The medieval practice of the sheriff seizing goods and chatals of debtors and then imprisoning those who cannot meet their liabilities, at huge cost to the state must end.

    No automatic discharge in Ireland, I remember hearing about a guy recently is still in process after 20 plus years.

    http://www.sbpost.ie/news-features/bankruptcy-law-changes-are-needed-soon-55181.html


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,116 ✭✭✭starviewadams


    This house was listed at 150k about two years ago, now looking for 29k. It's in a bad area of the town so im sure that wouldn't help

    http://www.daft.ie/searchsale.daft?id=539428

    Very honest ad!

    If I was selling the gaff I'd make no mention of anti-social behaviour in the area!


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 580 ✭✭✭IPushButtons


    Very honest ad! If I was selling the gaff I'd make no mention of anti-social behaviour in the area!

    I don't know mate, seems like there preparing people for what there gonna be in for so that when they see how bad the area is, it won't put them off immediately.

    The area has a lot of burnt out houses with a mix of people from all around Africa most of them are refugees


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,116 ✭✭✭starviewadams


    We didn't make any mention of the blood filled needles thrown in our garden every few days,or of the family of drug addicts nextdoor who's house had been shot at twice,or of the stolen car derby's that took place nightly when we sold our old house back in 2004,.

    If we had of we never would've sold the place.It was a crap area even for Clondalkin!

    Some rich property investor bought it to rent out in the end so we didn't mind too much not telling the whole truth.


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    A house on my road went up for sale in 2005. The owners were offered €1.1m but they declined. The house never sold. I don't think they ever intended to sell the house, just test the waters.

    A house a few doors up went on the market about 2 years ago for €895,000. It's in need of compete rennovation. The price has dropped to €595,000 and there's still no interest.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 126 ✭✭cusackd


    This house was listed at 150k about two years ago, now looking for 29k. It's in a bad area of the town so im sure that wouldn't help

    http://www.daft.ie/searchsale.daft?id=539428


    Have you seen the frickin street view of this?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,438 ✭✭✭TwoShedsJackson


    The property requires complete internal renovations and is located in a neighbourhood that has a reputation of experiencing anti-social behavior at times.

    Well that's a first for me anyway, if they're mentioning it in the ad itself. Surely 'this home is proudly brought to the market by Bloggs Estate Agents and offers an enthusiastic buyer a once in a lifetime opportunity to stamp their own personality on the property!!. The area also enjoys a vibrant social scene' would be more usual?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 9,423 ✭✭✭cml387


    This house was listed at 150k about two years ago, now looking for 29k. It's in a bad area of the town so im sure that wouldn't help

    http://www.daft.ie/searchsale.daft?id=539428


    I know it's OT, but I used to live in Willow Park 25 years ago and it was a nice respectable area.
    IPushbuttons, WTF happened?


  • Moderators, Arts Moderators Posts: 36,496 Mod ✭✭✭✭pickarooney


    Sticjones wrote: »
    Wouldn't be complete without an Alison O'Riordan quote

    Can anyone tell, without checking if this is satire or an actual quote?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,716 ✭✭✭LittleBook


    The Sunday Business Post reported a while back that Bolands Mills in Dublin city centre had dropped a massive 84% in value since the peak.

    The IGB site has dropped in value from €412m to €60m.

    There are sites all over the cities (not just in Dublin) which changed hands for millions and millions during the development frenzy but not to worry, the maniacs who financed all this will be fine.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 470 ✭✭Fran1985


    cusackd wrote: »
    Have you seen the frickin street view of this?

    Holy Sh/t, not if you paid me 29k would i move there!! Houses absolutely trashed beyond belief.

    Also, had a fixed rate mortgage for 3 years from 07, was paying nearly 1500 p/m, that went to tracker in 2010 down to 950 p/m. House is down almost 200k on what i paid for it, but i'm not too bothered. Because i've decided i'm not going to try and make a buck or 2 from it. I'm just gona keep it. Things went pair shaped for me, so i let it out. I also turned around my pair shaped situation and i'm contemplating moving back in. A lot of people keeping saying "oh what about the negative equity" I tell them, its not for sale so doesn't affect me.

    I know not everyone's in the same boat so its easy for me to say this, but hopefully others can turn around their situations and get themselves back to work, at something, anything, and start making some sort of payments.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,455 ✭✭✭✭Monty Burnz


    Sticjones wrote: »
    Wouldn't be complete without an Alison O'Riordan quote
    Her use of English always cracks me up. It reads like she learned to write by studying vintage Japanese video recorder instructions.


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