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Article: Lenihan says house prices now at bottom

2

Comments

  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    K-9 wrote: »
    Huh?

    Unemployment is not inexorably climbing upward since December.

    What country are you in? Here in Ireland unemployment is increasing still


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,376 ✭✭✭ei.sdraob


    What country are you in? Here in Ireland unemployment is increasing still

    he must have been listening to FF speeches

    here are the figures

    http://www.cso.ie/statistics/sasunemprates.htm


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,186 ✭✭✭✭jmayo


    I'm not disputing any of this. But there are still people who are in a position to buy. There aren't as many as there were four or five years ago, but they do still exist, believe it or not. And as long as demand is greater than supply you will get a price increase, even if the numbers involved are much lower than before. The point is that the government is now in a better position to control supply, and possibly artificially inflate property prices in future.

    See sentence in bold and then tell us how many vacant/unfinished properties are out there.
    I have so much respect for Brian that it really disappoints me to see him coming out saying this. Banks now that they have lost capital due to NAMA will decrease the amount of loans to people.

    Secondly as Europe rebounds interest rates will be raised by the ECB. The moment this happens the people that have been barely hanging on will be blown out of the water and the other people trying to buy a house will be frightened off the the rising interest rates and still falling prices. This still has another 2-3 years in it.

    Thirdly a lot of immigrants especially Eastern Europeans have left meaning more places are left empty

    How can you have respect for a man that came out with such utter sh**e ?
    Oh and this is also from the man that vehemently defended a fellow law professional that lied on a sworn affadivit to the high court.
    Oh and remember he forgot to read an important section of a report on Anglo.

    Never forget his lineage, born and bred ff who grew up watching his old man and charlie.
    SkepticOne wrote: »
    ...
    Eventually, of course, his credibility will run out but all he needs to do is make it last till the next election. Then it is somebody else's problem.
    ...

    His credibility ran out the day he admitted he didn't bother reading that section.
    His display defending o'dea only cemented in mind what I always thought of him.
    dan_d wrote: »
    Do you ever feel like the lunatics are running the asylum???......

    Every single day.
    Dannyboy83 wrote: »
    What, he's called bottom again?

    I seem to remember hearing the economy had turned a corner during the Budget Dec'09, but things have continued to decline since then (the only things not coming crashing down in post-pyramid Ireland are the unemployment, emigration and debt clock - which are inexorably climbing upward)

    We have turned so many fu**ing corners at this stage that we are back where we started and all we have to show for it all is the collosal expense of picking up the tab for every near do well and shyster that ruined us.

    I am not allowed discuss …



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 827 ✭✭✭thebaldsoprano


    Assuming for a moment what Lenihan says is true, can someone explain why this is a good thing and is being pitched as such? High property prices will surely lead to wage demands and higher commercial rents that will make us uncompetitive.

    It's unlikely this kind of statement would be made for any other utility, if Lenihan said 'ESB prices now at bottom, the worst is over' how would that make him sound?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,376 ✭✭✭ei.sdraob


    Assuming for a moment what Lenihan says is true, can someone explain why this is a good thing and is being pitched as such?

    NAMA and the government need prices to stay high and grow 20-25% from here in next 10 decades....


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    Assuming for a moment what Lenihan says is true, can someone explain why this is a good thing and is being pitched as such? High property prices will surely lead to wage demands and higher commercial rents that will make us uncompetitive.

    I've pointed this out since the first day that NAMA was foisted on us.

    But Lenihan and FF obviously don't have a clue as to what is in the long-term interests of the country.


  • Moderators, Home & Garden Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators, Regional West Moderators Posts: 16,724 Mod ✭✭✭✭yop


    Liam Byrne wrote: »
    I've pointed this out since the first day that NAMA was foisted on us.

    But Lenihan and FF obviously don't have a clue as to what is in the long-term interests of the country.


    Foisted on US is correct, not on the politicians.

    At the end of the day they will always have their pensions and perks to get their mortgages and bills sorted out.

    The tax increases which will come in December will barely affect them.
    The mortgage increases in the next year will barely affect them.
    IF Quinn needs to be bailed out then the 5% increase will barely affect them.

    So what I am saying is that NAMA will at worst get them out of power BUT, they will still have all the payoffs/pensions/perks etc to see them through, its us poor bast*RDs who will be driven over the edge.

    Anarchy will descend on this asylum, in what form who knows but people are getting MAJOR piss*D off.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,855 ✭✭✭✭average_runner


    They will be out of power soon but if people believe FG and labour are a better alternative and will turn things around, well we are more stupid than we thought.

    No difference between FG and FF.


  • Registered Users Posts: 784 ✭✭✭zootroid


    They will be out of power soon but if people believe FG and labour are a better alternative and will turn things around, well we are more stupid than we thought.

    No difference between FG and FF.

    Except FG didn't spend the better part of a decade destroying the economy. And as I would lay the majority of the blame at the door of FF, I have no faith in them helping to get Ireland out of recession.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,855 ✭✭✭✭average_runner


    zootroid wrote: »
    Except FG didn't spend the better part of a decade destroying the economy. And as I would lay the majority of the blame at the door of FF, I have no faith in them helping to get Ireland out of recession.


    Before I say this i aint a FF

    Ireland is not the only economy to of crash, so while some of it is FF fault not all of it is.

    FG destroyed Irish life in the 80's, ask anyone who went thru the 80's under FG. They did nothing for job creation, borrowed millions that we the tax payer paid back in the boom.


    Life is a funny thing but this is just history repeating itself, all the parties are the same and dont fool yourself thinking they arent.


  • Moderators, Home & Garden Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators, Regional West Moderators Posts: 16,724 Mod ✭✭✭✭yop


    all the parties are the same and dont fool yourself thinking they arent.

    I am beginning to believe this also to be honest, I think they all sup from the same pot which the tax payer boils, even the opposition get big salaries and big perks.

    I can't off the top of my head think of anything which the opposition have stood up for us of late and got pushed through. Even the 2 weeks holidays they barely murmured a call to not take the 2 weeks.

    The opposition from what I can see are there for the theater effect, in essence dont do anything but have to be there.
    They are as removed from reality as the muppets who are in power. :o


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    Ireland is not the only economy to of crash, so while some of it is FF fault not all of it is.

    The extent of it is; they made it a million times worse, ignoring warnings, ploughing ahead with unsustainable policies, and "regulating" in a way that suited their mates, with absolutely no long-term goals!

    Other countries are on their way out of their recessions.
    FG destroyed Irish life in the 80's, ask anyone who went thru the 80's under FG. They did nothing for job creation, borrowed millions that we the tax payer paid back in the boom.

    I went through the 80s, and while it was certainly tough enough, I don't remember it being anything like what you've outlined above......can you provide links/proof ?
    Life is a funny thing but this is just history repeating itself, all the parties are the same and dont fool yourself thinking they arent.

    History repeating itself, eh ? When's the last time anyone flushed 70-odd-billion down the toilet with absolutely no return ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 876 ✭✭✭woodseb


    Liam Byrne wrote: »


    History repeating itself, eh ? When's the last time anyone flushed 70-odd-billion down the toilet with absolutely no return ?

    when's the first time it happened?:confused:

    it might help the discussion if you didn't resort to ridiculous hyperbole....


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,121 ✭✭✭BigAl81


    From David McWilliams Facebook page within the last hour...

    "Don't go near a house now. Prices will keep falling"

    Funny, didn't hear Lenihan mention this ;o)
    Go Team!


  • Registered Users Posts: 96 ✭✭Oisintarrant


    thebman wrote: »
    I'm about the age people used to buy houses at in Ireland. Maybe even a few years past when people were starting to save "to get on the ladder".

    I can count on one hand the number of people I know that want to buy a house in the next two years.

    We make jokes about it sometimes. My circle of friends would all be earning enough to save for a deposit if they wanted to I think. Most are more concerned with saving money for other things.

    Of course my circle of friends is a little peculiar to start with in that nobody in it ever took out a loan even during boom times.

    Your not alone there bud. Im in the same boat, 27 years old, Id consider myself to have a lot of friends with a range of incomes from very high to pulling the dole, and I can only think of 1 who bought an apartment in Dublin, and another who is building a house in Kerry, a home for life which he has saved for since he was in college. (both the higher end of income).
    The only way I can see any of this plateau'ing out is a nation of renters. And to be honest, Id have no problem with that. People need to get over the idea that they HAVE TO buy a house. Rent until you can afford it. Rent away for years, which will eventually pay off the dopes with their property ladders, and in 10/15 years when youve saved up say 1/3 or so your property value, then jump in with the banks. This is what I hear from friends and what I believe myself to be the popular opinion at my age.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,186 ✭✭✭✭jmayo


    Before I say this i aint a FF

    Ireland is not the only economy to of crash, so while some of it is FF fault not all of it is.

    FG destroyed Irish life in the 80's, ask anyone who went thru the 80's under FG. They did nothing for job creation, borrowed millions that we the tax payer paid back in the boom.

    Life is a funny thing but this is just history repeating itself, all the parties are the same and dont fool yourself thinking they arent.

    Did you live through the 80s or are you just listening to some people talk about it ?
    And I bet they were ff people at that.
    FG/Lab might not have made much of a difference because guess what ff under haughey kept snapping at their heels and would not acknowlegde how deep a hole the country was in.

    Secondly ff only make a difference after 1987 because FG led by Alan Dukes agreed to support the government if they made sensible economic decisions.
    It finished his political career but it helped save the country.

    Oh and for starters the economic destruction of the 80s was caused by a vote buying ff government under one jack lynch in 1977, which just goes to show what happens when ff get an overall majority.
    Removal of household rates, car tax and the like screwed this country dearly.
    To this day he has casued untold damage to local councils with his removal of household rates.

    For some one that claims they are not ff your arguments sound like the ff bible, starting with the usual mantra of the world economy crashed, ff are not entirely to blame and ending with the old "sure they are all as bad as each other".
    :rolleyes:
    yop wrote: »
    I am beginning to believe this also to be honest, I think they all sup from the same pot which the tax payer boils, even the opposition get big salaries and big perks.

    I can't off the top of my head think of anything which the opposition have stood up for us of late and got pushed through. Even the 2 weeks holidays they barely murmured a call to not take the 2 weeks.

    The opposition from what I can see are there for the theater effect, in essence dont do anything but have to be there.
    They are as removed from reality as the muppets who are in power. :o

    The big problem with our democracy is the whip system which means that FG nor Labour can't do a lot, once ff keep their backbenchers in line and ff lite (formerly known as the Green Party) and a couple of independents bought off.
    They just do not have the numbers.
    Thus they can't get anything pushed through as you put it.
    Sometimes I think that they should ask the people onto the streets.
    But it is a dangerous game to play if you are a democratically elected politican believing in the rule of law and order, and secondly maybe they know us Irish are very hard to unite behind anything that doesn't benefit us personally.

    woodseb wrote: »
    when's the first time it happened?:confused:

    it might help the discussion if you didn't resort to ridiculous hyperbole....

    But it is a rdiculous situation to find ourselves in, so maybe it does deserve some hyperbole.
    Have you ever stood back and thought that we are committiing anything up to 70 billion euro into saving a financial institution that was morally bankrupt a long time ago, only lent to a few high net worth connected individuals primarily involved in construction, had only a limited number of normal customers and to most people was a non systemic institution ?
    Look at the cost of saving IN. :mad:

    Trying to rationalise spending that proportion of our GNP on these failed entreprise and trying to justify why every baby born in this country today comes into the world saddled with something like a €5,000 bill due to these failed entreprises is ridiculous to start with in my mind.

    I am not allowed discuss …



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    woodseb wrote: »
    it might help the discussion if you didn't resort to ridiculous hyperbole....

    I'm not sure how much "hyperbole" is even required when people are openly discussing €70 billion in the context of pumping €22 billion into Anglo and even the so-called "public service representative", Alan Dukes, hasn't got a clue whether that'll be the end of it, or whether we'll ever get anything in return for it.

    With interviews like that on air from someone "in charge" then I don't think my post was hyperbole at all.

    What if that €22 billion ends up at €30 billion, or €40 billion ? Will you accept my point then that the bulk of €70 billion has been flushed down the sewer ?

    Because whatever return we might get to dilute what you call "hyperbole" is seriously at risk if no-one has a clue where this is going to end, combined with the fact that the more we put in the more we're tied into paying in more in order to get at least something back.


  • Registered Users Posts: 784 ✭✭✭zootroid


    Before I say this i aint a FF

    Ireland is not the only economy to of crash, so while some of it is FF fault not all of it is.

    FG destroyed Irish life in the 80's, ask anyone who went thru the 80's under FG. They did nothing for job creation, borrowed millions that we the tax payer paid back in the boom.


    Life is a funny thing but this is just history repeating itself, all the parties are the same and dont fool yourself thinking they arent.

    You're right, Ireland isn't the only economy to crash, but we are certainly one of the hardest hit economies. And while there is a global recession, not every country went into recession, Australia for example. And one of the reasons is that they have a well regulated financial sector.

    Our problems are mainly home grown. Had we an effective regulatory system, counter cyclical economic policies (instead of FF trying to buy every election, in fact instead of FF trying to buy off every vested interest), and greater efforts to invest in infrastructure and remain competitive, the Ireland of today would be vastly different. We might not be borrowing billions to fund a huge budget deficit, nor to bail out the banks and developers. Our unemployment rate might not be around 13%. We actually might have had some reserves built up to create some sort of stimulus package to address what effects the global recession caused our economy.

    With regards to your opinions on FG, I am too young to remember the 80's, I was born in 1981 so would not have been old enough to understand what was going on. But, if FG were a disaster in the 80's (and I'll leave that to others to debate), what member of the FG government in the 80's is a TD today? On the other hand, the FF TDs who made the disastrous decisions over the last decade are still in power, and as I view them as being ultimately responsible for the mess we are in today, I would not like to see them charged with getting us out of this mess. I am under no illusions that the next government will inherit huge difficulties, but I would much rather see a government formed that had nothing to do with the decisions that led us here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    This is the way I see it:

    If NAMA gets the banks lending again, we are close to the bottom. The real bottom, with some minor corrections down the line, but far less chaotic than what we've seen.

    If NAMA is unsuccessful in restoring bank lending, it will continue to plummet, businesses will continue to close, and the economy will continue to crash.


    Its that simple.
    Without bank lending, we are fubar'd.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,376 ✭✭✭ei.sdraob


    "The report found that asking prices for residential property around the country fell by 3.4% during the first three months of 2010, the smallest quarterly fall in almost two years, according to the latest report published by property website Daft.ie. The national average asking price during March 2010 was €234,000, a total of €120,000 or 33% below the peak in 2007.

    The fall in asking prices has again varied across the country. In Dublin, Wicklow, Waterford and Cork, price falls were in line with the national average of 3.4%, while prices were closer to static in other counties, including Sligo and Roscommon. In Galway city asking prices were hardest hit, falling by 8.8% in the first 3 months of the year.

    The length of time properties remain on the market increased slightly in the first three months and nationally the average time to sell a property is now 10 months. However, this may be a sign that long-standing properties are shifting. By the start of April, of the 3,000 properties listed for sale in January, one in three was either sold or sale agreed. The percentage marked sale agreed is twice as high in Dublin, where price falls have been highest since the peak and the total stock for sale continues to fall steadily.

    Read the full report, including a commentary by Brian Lucey, Associate Professor at TCD School of Business, at www.daft.ie/report.

    Kind Regards,

    The Daft Team"

    daft report is out people
    Given that, what do we find? Is the crash over? Yes, if you live in NAMA-land, a country wherein the valuation of assets to be transferred has been set at their value as of end-November 2009. In the world wherein the rest of us live, the crash continues. House prices continue to fall, albeit at a slower pace than heretofore


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  • Registered Users Posts: 46 ronanlyons


    The latest Daft Report is out this morning and finds that asking prices are still falling - 3.4% in the first three months of the year and one third on average from the peak so far. (Some more discussion over on my blog - good news being one in three properties posted for sale in January are now either sold or sale agreed.)

    Its relevance here is that Brian Lucey, who provides the commentary to this Daft Report, believes that falling prices pose a significant issue for NAMA:
    House prices have continued to fall since November 2009, the date chosen (why, on whose advice?) by Minister Lenihan as the valuation date for NAMA. Based on Daft.ie figures, house prices have fallen by a further 4.1%. Applied to a €50bn portfolio, that's a €1.5bn excess that will be paid over what would have been the case had the minister waited. Put it another way - the entire public sector pension levy has been squandered on a needless overpayment.
    Prof Lucey also sticks his neck on the line with a call for the bottom not now, as the Minister has, but in 18 months:
    So the crash is slowing. However, it is not over. The Daft.ie index peaked in May 2007. To expect the trough to be reached less than three years later is to fly in the face of historical evidence. Referring back to Morgan Kelly's prescient, eye-opening ESR article which for many of us represented the key moment when our critical faculties on property were rebooted, a fall of 50% is likely. Based on a straight line projection of average declines in value since the peak this would see another 18 months of declining prices. That would be 50 months of house price falls, or just over 4 years, towards the lower end of historical experience. It is probable that as we decline towards the trough, the speed at which house prices fall slows down. And this is what we are starting to see - in the last six months, the average decline has been lower than the previous six months, itself lower then the period before.
    The total level of stock for sale on the market would certainly suggest that sellers face significant competition for buyers still:
    2010-Q1-sale-stock-flow.png

    (More over in the usual spot, www.daft.ie/report. Those who like data can check out a map of falls in asking prices by county on Manyeyes, the data visualization system.)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,186 ✭✭✭✭jmayo


    Anyone with an ounce of cop on can see no reason for prices to remain steady never mind rise.
    All indicators point to a falling market.
    • increasing unemployment
    • unsure future with probable tax increases, decreasing salaries.
    • interest rates rising meaning more possible defaults
    • huge oversupply
    • banks not lending
    • if banks do start lending again sometime then there will be no 100% 40 year mortgages.
    • huge public spending cuts and national debt ramping up to pay for insolvent banks
    • increasing emigration of would be FTBs
    • immigrants leaving meaning decresing renters in market
    • huge negative sentiment towards property purchase
    • total mistrust of population in any pronouncements from vested interests and politicans

    All of these lead to people just not wanting or being able to enter into the market.

    Even though cost of living in certain areas is decreasing watch the effects of increasing oil prices.

    IMHO as a non economist all indicators are pointing towards decreasing house prices rather than the drivel lenihan came out with.

    I am not allowed discuss …



  • Registered Users Posts: 146 ✭✭letitroll


    jmayo wrote: »
    Anyone with an ounce of cop on can see no reason for prices to remain steady never mind rise.

    All indicators point to a falling market.
    • increasing unemployment
    • unsure future with probable tax increases, decreasing salaries.
    • interest rates rising meaning more possible defaults
    • huge oversupply
    • banks not lending
    • if banks do start lending again sometime then there will be no 100% 40 year mortgages.
    • huge public spending cuts and national debt ramping up to pay for insolvent banks
    • increasing emigration of would be FTBs
    • immigrants leaving meaning decresing renters in market
    • huge negative sentiment towards property purchase
    • total mistrust of population in any pronouncements from vested interests and politicans
    All of these lead to people just not wanting or being able to enter into the market.

    Even though cost of living in certain areas is decreasing watch the effects of increasing oil prices.

    IMHO as a non economist all indicators are pointing towards decreasing house prices rather than the drivel lenihan came out with.

    Totally agree with the above every indicator points to falling prices and anyone else who tells you otherwise is either an estate agent or a home owner who hates the thought he wasn't the cute whore who made a bomb on property deals and shivers when he hears the word negative equity:

    to add to it:

    the public sector Ireland's biggest employer has implemented siginificant salary cuts along with the private sector and will shed numbers in the coming 2-3 years

    petrol prices will reach the highest levels recorded in this country(with oil at only $80 a barrel) in the next two to three weeks. What happens when oil peaks near 2008 prices of $130 a barrel. Monopoly money petrol prices

    result- the commute cost from the likes of Enfield, Virginia will bleed people dry, it always did but even more so in the future such Spoke towns are to far from the hub and have no industry or jobs to be viable

    to date the banks have not forclosed in great numbers on those who are not paying their mortgages. NAMA is designed to create a properly functioning banking system, a properly functioning banking system forecloses on people who dont pay their mortgage how many people in Ireland are three months behind on payments. Answer: alot. Waves of firesales are yet to come.

    Rent relief as it stands supports nearly 25% of landlords the rent relief payments are unsustainable and will be reduced. This socialised rental market will collapse and landlords will exit the market dumping properties adding to oversupply. New investor buyers will see little value in entering such a market a significant proportion of buyers who operated during boom years will not be a part of IRelands property market.


    Remember the lesson from the dotcom bubble more people lost more money on the way down as they jumped back in thinking it had bottomed out.


  • Registered Users Posts: 386 ✭✭Wudyaquit


    letitroll wrote: »
    Remember the lesson from the dotcom bubble more people lost more money on the way down as they jumped back in thinking it had bottomed out.
    Couldn't agree more with all of that.

    Brian Leninomics Lesson 1:
    "Market equilibrium = where supply massively overstrips demand".

    There's no way even this pleb could possibly believe this, so once again he shows utter contempt for the average Irish person and is quite happy for 1st time buyers to sign their futures away in the blind hope that it'll help NAMA and vindicate his misguided policies.

    Given how the electorate have swallowed everything they've been told over the past 10 years, you can't blame him for trying.


  • Registered Users Posts: 146 ✭✭letitroll


    the great tragedy of all this is that the inflating another property bubble will be politically popular and a party that rescues people from negative equity could easily appeal to the Irish peoples property perversion

    remember how rich people felt when they believed they were genuis investors when their house rose 15% in a year

    http://www.theonion.com/articles/recessionplagued-nation-demands-new-bubble-to-inve,2486/


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 161 ✭✭NUIG_FiannaFail


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,496 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.

    lads did'nt a certain frank fahey say something along those lines:rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 161 ✭✭NUIG_FiannaFail


    lads did'nt a certain frank fahey say something along those lines:rolleyes:

    Yes but at the time no one knew how things were going to turn out. Things won't get any worse from here. The green shoots of recovery are already showing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 146 ✭✭letitroll


    The green shoots of recovery are already showing.

    name your green shoots, our main market the EU's growth dipped below expectations in the last quarter

    EU monetary union is crumbling

    the euro is a defunct currency and hedge funds are lining up to short it

    unemployment is only 14% much higher when you factor those doing what can only be called mickey mouse FAS courses and another huge cohort on part-time working hours

    those unemployed have skills that are not transferable they were labourers, brickies they are not fit to press the ON button of the knowledge economy and will cost billions to upskill

    the private debt burden never mind the public debt burden will smother domestic demand for years to come

    Ireland Inc has done a great PR job dressing up our situation on the international markets but the reality is setting in Greek stye marches are around the corner as the public sector reacts to the new deal, Quinn Insurance and the weekly Anglo shock horror will continue

    Brussels(our IMF) will dictate policy to us


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,496 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    Yes but at the time no one knew how things were going to turn out. Things won't get any worse from here. The green shoots of recovery are already showing.

    can you point this out to the 400k people not working at present,ah jaysus i know where these jobs are right here http://jobbank.fas.ie/servlet/Watis?SESS=52691_7&SERVICE=CRITERIUMBROWSE&TEMPLATE=WWW_JS_VAC_CRITERIUM_BROWSE.HTM&ROW=11&BACK=TEMPLATE%3DWWW_JS_VAC_CRITERIUM_OVERVIEW.HTM

    and a few more from the toll roads that will be shortly in place thanks to minister Dempsey,i must say sweary mary idea of the fas wpp scheme was brill:rolleyes:


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 161 ✭✭NUIG_FiannaFail


    can you point this out to the 400k people not working at present,ah jaysus i know where these jobs are right here http://jobbank.fas.ie/servlet/Watis?SESS=52691_7&SERVICE=CRITERIUMBROWSE&TEMPLATE=WWW_JS_VAC_CRITERIUM_BROWSE.HTM&ROW=11&BACK=TEMPLATE%3DWWW_JS_VAC_CRITERIUM_OVERVIEW.HTM

    and a few more from the toll roads that will be shortly in place thanks to minister Dempsey,i must say sweary mary idea of the fas wpp scheme was brill:rolleyes:

    When America starts to pick up we'll all pick up


  • Registered Users Posts: 146 ✭✭letitroll


    Fail - America has a debt burden beyond all imagination the years of America driving the world economy are gone


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.

    dangerous advice:mad:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,496 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    When America starts to pick up we'll all pick up

    oh sweet jesus is that the best you can come up with,i did not study biz/accountancy in college but i have a working knowledge of it through my work more than some TD & Ministers.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭fontanalis


    When America starts to pick up we'll all pick up
    I thought the line was that Ireland always follows England by 6 months! Either way ireland has always been a basket case and the US goes through cycles, so I don't know what your basing it on.


  • Registered Users Posts: 386 ✭✭Wudyaquit


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.
    This is exactly why Herr Direktor wants us to believe it's the bottom - to lead some more lambs to the slaughter in order to help the economy. i.e. himself with NAMA and anyone with substantial property interests.

    Blindly following this FF-serving rhetoric is what got us to where we are today - unfortunately for Lenihan, people have more sense now, and the market will decide when the bottom's been hit, not him. FF have lost all credibility and ruined too many lives for any sensible person to fall on their sword to help "the economy" based on nonsense not backed up by even the most basic economic reasoning.


  • Moderators, Home & Garden Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators, Regional West Moderators Posts: 16,724 Mod ✭✭✭✭yop


    Yes but at the time no one knew how things were going to turn out. Things won't get any worse from here. The green shoots of recovery are already showing.

    JEebus, how many weeks did you spend in the FF "Brainwash camp" :rolleyes:

    Green shoots!! For who exactly?

    Please explain to us where these are because back here on Earth we are finding it hard to find them.

    Not unless you are counting the daffodils which have popped up!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,892 ✭✭✭Head The Wall


    Yes but at the time no one knew how things were going to turn out. Things won't get any worse from here. The green shoots of recovery are already showing.
    Are you going to go guarantor on anyone buying a house now. You shouldn't have a problem doing so you're that confdent


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,207 ✭✭✭The_Honeybadger


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.
    FF Have you seen the trouble buying and selling houses has caused people in this country!! I can only assume you are taking the p**s, if not please entertain us with a basis for this ludicrous claim!


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭gurramok


    Did ye not hear lads?

    Green shoots are coming from the mass forestry plantations, as we all know money grows on trees! :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,065 ✭✭✭Fighting Irish


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.

    lol


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,163 ✭✭✭✭Liam Byrne


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.

    Sounds more like a hope/prayer than anything based remotely on fact.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,496 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    Liam Byrne wrote: »
    Sounds more like a hope/prayer than anything based remotely on fact.

    ah liam of all people you should know better that the FF brigade live on a different planet to the rest of us well according to gormless:rolleyes:

    tenner on it that he is a member of the M.I.A.V.I:D and needs a bit of biz.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,306 ✭✭✭Zamboni


    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.

    Assuming you are serious, what are you basing this on?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,186 ✭✭✭✭jmayo


    letitroll wrote: »
    ...
    petrol prices will reach the highest levels recorded in this country(with oil at only $80 a barrel) in the next two to three weeks. What happens when oil peaks near 2008 prices of $130 a barrel. Monopoly money petrol prices

    result- the commute cost from the likes of Enfield, Virginia will bleed people dry, it always did but even more so in the future such Spoke towns are to far from the hub and have no industry or jobs to be viable
    ...

    That was why I mentioned fuel prices.
    There is not much talk about it, but look how petrol/diesel prices have inched up over the last few weeks.
    Even though other costs may be going down, transport costs due to fuel can rise and everyone in the country is affected even if they don't commutte or have a car.
    letitroll wrote: »
    Rent relief as it stands supports nearly 25% of landlords the rent relief payments are unsustainable and will be reduced. This socialised rental market will collapse and landlords will exit the market dumping properties adding to oversupply. New investor buyers will see little value in entering such a market a significant proportion of buyers who operated during boom years will not be a part of IRelands property market...

    I mentioned this on a thread about cutting budget deficit.
    Again few are picking up on it in media, because lo and behold it is keeping the rental market at an artifical high and we would not want to hit all those landlords out there.
    Why the Christ are taxpayers contributing so much towards the rental income of landlords ?

    I know people who based their entire investment portfolios of properties on renting to single mothers, "refugees", etc all paid for the taxpayers.
    Now is a great time for 1st time buyers. Prices surely can't go any lower than they are now. Plus it would be great for the economy for people to start buying property.

    My God you do lay it on.
    How many threads have you now polluted with your brand of lenihan/jack neddy o'keefe gombeen ff mantras and bullsh**e ?

    You are either a rare genius and master of irony/sarcasm or God forbid you are real, in which case I demand the taxes back that were paid to keep you in "education" in NUIG. :confused:
    lads did'nt a certain frank fahey say something along those lines:rolleyes:

    True enough he spoke at seminar in Galway last year trying to entice FTBs into the market.
    He probably also tried to get them to invest in fishing boats belonging to his constituents as well. :rolleyes:

    I am not allowed discuss …



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 161 ✭✭NUIG_FiannaFail


    oh sweet jesus is that the best you can come up with,i did not study biz/accountancy in college but i have a working knowledge of it through my work more than some TD & Ministers.

    We are a small open economy and depend on trade


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭fontanalis


    We are a small open economy and depend on trade

    Trading glorified shoe boxes to each other?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 161 ✭✭NUIG_FiannaFail


    fontanalis wrote: »
    Trading glorified shoe boxes to each other?

    After the collapse of Lehman Brothers we were always going to face difficulties. No one person is responsible for this crisis. We all enjoyed the boom and encouraged more spending.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭fontanalis


    After the collapse of Lehman Brothers we were always going to face difficulties. No one person is responsible for this crisis. We all enjoyed the boom and encouraged more spending.

    facepalm.jpg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,496 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    We are a small open economy and depend on trade

    go on please tell me how it works:rolleyes:or do you not know


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