johnnyskeleton wrote: » Here's a thread from thepropertypin about Lehman Brothers collapsing - two months before they actually did:http://www.thepropertypin.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=10455 Here is a thread with excerpts from Morgan Kelly's various writings, predicting 70% falls of gains from peak, banking collapse and the length of time it woud take etc:http://www.thepropertypin.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=60874 These are just two examples of many that predicted exactly what was going to happen. More generally, many people could predict in broad terms what might happen. Whether any one individual did or did not predict what might or would happen is a moveable feast, and I'm sure many people (including myself) did not anticipate the scale of what happened. But it is simply incorrect to say that no one could foresee the collapse.
FlashD wrote: » You're wrong, it will. If the market value of a house is 100k and you are paying a mortgage of 200k (negative equity 100k) ....then it will take longer. Jeez....
DeanAustin wrote: » How will a 200k mortgage take longer to pay if the house is in negative equity and worth 100k or if it isn't in negative equity and worth 200k?
Ush1 wrote: » It's not going to take longer but you'll be paying it for longer obviously than if you had of gotten the house for cheaper and your repayments will be more while peoples salaries may be going down. So to say negative equity only matters if you're selling the house is false.
padd b1975 wrote: » Negative equity only comes into play if you decide to sell the property. It has zero impact on cost of finance.
FlashD wrote: » Negative equity is always in play, you have your mortgage amount, you know the current market value of the property, subtract the two....bingo! Plus = good times, in profit. Minus = negative equity, i'm paying more for something than its worth.
desertcircus wrote: » It makes it harder to switch providers and effectively ties you to whatever your bank offers. Incidentally, I really dislike the approach of "if you're planning to live there long term, no worries". If your circumstances change unexpectedly, negative equity is a millstone. And if you bought in 2007 for 300k and your neighbour bought in 2011 for 150, you're going to pay somewhere in the region of a quarter of a million euro more over the life of the mortgage. Signing at the peak cost some people ten thousand quid a year for the next three decades, and it's disingenuous in the extreme to say it only matters if you're trying to sell.
Fred Swanson wrote: » This post has been deleted.
FlashD wrote: » For sure, you can't say that negative equity doesn't effect people, it does. It is only natural to want to know the current market value of your investments (lets be honest, a home is an investment). Knowing that you are paying way more than the current market value can have a deep psychological effect on people. As you say almost similar to a millstone.
.jacksparrow. wrote: » You're changing your original point. Simple fact is whatever you borrow you have to pay back, no more or no less if your house value increases or decreases.
FlashD wrote: » I'm not going to explain negative equity to you again, check elsewhere. Are you an auctioneer? I know they have been on previous threads trying to push the market leading people to believe that negative equity is ok, just pay out a whopping big sum for your house and sure don't worry about it after that. Cute lads have your pockets lined at the ordinary irish homeowners expense over the past decade.
.jacksparrow. wrote: » A home is an investment?? A home is not an investment, a home is somewhere to live and raise your kids. If you view it as an investment, then I have no pity on anyone who cries negative equity.
IzzyWizzy wrote: » Trouble is with the 'hindsight' argument is that you could use it about any foolish decision. Plenty of us could see it at the time. 1) You really thought house prices in Cavan were going to be 750K for any length of time? You couldn't see that this was a bubble and not sustainable? In an underpopulated country with huge amounts of new house/apartment construction? A country whose economy had suddenly skyrocketed beyond all recognition in a very short time? No alarm bells? 2) See point number one. Dublin is not London and Mullingar certainly isn't London. Why would anyone have thought prices in Ireland would keep going up and up? Why would that have happened? It happens in London because it's a hugely overcrowded city which has had a very good economy for years, thousands of homegrown companies, foreign investors buying to let...and even in London, prices will have to come down eventually. To imagine that your 3 bed semi in Cavan will ever be worth millions of euro is just delusional, honestly. 3) Well, you had another option, didn't you? Not to buy that glass of Coke. If nobody bought 3 euro glasses of Coke, the price would come down. You could have gone to the supermarket and bought a bottle of it or you could have just gone without. If Coke went up to 10 euro a glass, would you still buy it because that's what it costs, even though the cost is not in line with anything else and certainly not in line with your salary? Would you start borrowing money from other people so you could afford your daily glass of Coke?
IzzyWizzy wrote: » You seriously didn't see that there was something wrong with paying half a million euro for a house in Cavan or Mullingar? Something fishy about house prices doubling or trebling in just a few years? Seriously? I'm not jeering, I feel very sorry for people who bought during the boom, but I do wonder WTF they were thinking.
FlashD wrote: » A home is an investment, it's an investment in the future of your family, land, bricks and mortar cost money. Enough with the 'wishy washy' thinking.....good luck!
Hannibal Smith wrote: » No you did not forsee what was going to happen. No one could forsee what was going to happen with Leman Brothers, how quickly it would crumble and how it would effect the rest of us. That is total arrogant nonsense
Defiler Of The Coffin wrote: » I do recall Shane Ross saying in his Sindo column that "the property market is on stilts, get out now" at least two years before the actual crash happened. So you can't say that the warning signs weren't there. The Irish property market and economy as a whole was still in serious trouble regardless if Lehman Bros collapsed, it may have hastened the demise but it was still inevitable.
cournioni wrote: » Why don't you stop with the wishy washy thinking and just come out with what you really meant. Equity only matters if you are looking to sell on your property, not home, property. What jacksparrow was saying was correct, people bought homes as investments in the past with views to sell on for a profit. They believed that the price would grow and grow. It didn't and now we have people up in arms blaming everybody else but themselves for being stuck in an investment property. They played the game and lost. Sorry to break it to you.