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Property Market 2019

1767779818294

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,205 ✭✭✭✭hmmm


    But contrarians are inevitably right at some point...
    There is nothing inevitable about contrarians being right. Sometimes they can just be wrong.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,036 ✭✭✭pearcider


    But contrarians are inevitably right at some point...

    Political shenanigans don’t change facts. It’s just a fact that this credit bubble will pop. It tried to pop in 2008 and was reflated by trebling the national debt of the USA and taking the fed balance sheet from 500 billion to 4 trillion in trash assets. The fed tried to unwind this in 2016 and the market crashed. They have returned to quantitive easing recently and will not be able to stop it not raise interest rates without crashing the phony economy. These are the facts.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,036 ✭✭✭pearcider


    hmmm wrote: »
    It's certainly not facts. It must be scary holding all that gold when there is the nothing but good economic news eh?

    Actually I agree with you partly - if we see a big runup in equities as the US & China deliver a trade deal, it could be very bad for the bond market (and very very bad for gold). Risk will definitely be on. Trump seems to measure financial success through the stock market, so everything will be pointed in the direction of pumping that up if he is still President in 2020.

    The impact on Irish property prices - not sure, but certainly a Brexit deal would remove a lot of overhang. On the other hand the CBI rules seem to be working well, and supply certainly seems to have caught up with demand. Hopefully it gets a bit boring for a few years.

    What’s not factual here? You believe the fed can run a ten trillion dollar balance sheet...a 100 trillion? You believe because the US can run a 1 trillion deficit, it can clearly run a 3 trillion one? 5 trillion? The obvious problem is this new money printing (QE4)has nowhere to go now but into commodities and hence into the CPI. Once that happens (QE for the people) the nightmare these central planners have imposed on us will become evident for all to see.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,211 ✭✭✭riddles


    Once that happens (QE for the people) the nightmare these central planners have imposed on us will become evident for all to see.

    What does this mean in terms of outcome?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,205 ✭✭✭✭hmmm


    pearcider wrote: »
    What’s not factual here? You believe the fed can run a ten trillion dollar balance sheet...a 100 trillion? You believe because the US can run a 1 trillion deficit, it can clearly run a 3 trillion one? 5 trillion? The obvious problem is this new money printing (QE4)has nowhere to go now but into commodities and hence into the CPI. Once that happens (QE for the people) the nightmare these central planners have imposed on us will become evident for all to see.
    It gets really really boring on these threads listening to people regurgitating the latest news they hear on zerohedge, or whatever blog they're on these days. Telling us in absolute certainty what the economic system is going to do, despite the best Economists and Central Bankers in the world having no such certainty as to how the system works.

    It's frustrating to think that there are people watching who may even be listening to this - if they have been listening to this for the past 10 years they'll be still renting, have spent all their money on gold which has done nothing, and their friends and relatives who had done the boring thing of putting money into pensions are up 200 or even 300%. People who have bought houses have mortgages of 3% or so, many locked in for the long term, paying half of what rent would cost.

    We've had people on these threads who really knew their stuff - I remember before the big crash of 2006/2007 people talking about how Bear Stearn's CDOs were selling for a lot less than what they were being carried for on the Balance Sheet - real figures, real facts, real hard evidence that something unusual was happening. Those were people I listened to. People throwing around vague figures about deficits, at a time when investors are paying governments for debt, could mean absolutely anything, particularly when they use words like "the market crashed in 2016" (hint - it didn't).

    So yeah I have no idea what a US deficit of that size means, or whether it will ever mean anything, and I really don't care. Can we get back to talking about the real influences on Irish property prices now?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,036 ✭✭✭pearcider


    hmmm wrote: »
    It gets really really boring on these threads listening to people regurgitating the latest news they hear on zerohedge, or whatever blog they're on these days. Telling us in absolute certainty what the economic system is going to do, despite the best Economists and Central Bankers in the world having no such certainty as to how the system works.

    It's frustrating to think that there are people watching who may even be listening to this - if they have been listening to this for the past 10 years they'll be still renting, have spent all their money on gold which has done nothing, and their friends and relatives who had done the boring thing of putting money into pensions are up 200 or even 300%. People who have bought houses have mortgages of 3% or so, many locked in for the long term, paying half of what rent would cost.

    We've had people on these threads who really knew their stuff - I remember before the big crash of 2006/2007 people talking about how Bear Stearn's CDOs were selling for a lot less than what they were being carried for on the Balance Sheet - real figures, real facts, real hard evidence that something unusual was happening. Those were people I listened to. People throwing around vague figures about deficits, at a time when investors are paying governments for debt, could mean absolutely anything, particularly when they use words like "the market crashed in 2016" (hint - it didn't).

    So yeah I have no idea what a US deficit of that size means, or whether it will ever mean anything, and I really don't care. Can we get back to talking about the real influences on Irish property prices now?

    Excuse me you brought up a Chinese US trade deal as reasons to be bullish about Irish housing. But now I can’t bring up the huge deficits that the US is running to artificially stimulate growth as a reason to be bearish? How does that make sense? There’s nothing vague about the huge stimulus the US is giving their economy. These are the facts. You’re the one using unproven market rumours as reasons to be bullish.

    https://www.apnews.com/5e107e95d7fd422bbcf1bbdf0cd12454

    But you pretend it’s ok and Irish property is not massively exposed to the US and massively overpriced.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,036 ✭✭✭pearcider


    riddles wrote: »
    Once that happens (QE for the people) the nightmare these central planners have imposed on us will become evident for all to see.

    What does this mean in terms of outcome?

    Hard to say which option they will choose. As corporate America is already maxed out on debt (hence stock market all time highs) and property also has no room to grow, QE4 will mean massive increases in government transfer payments which are consumed. The CBO predicts trillion dollar deficit are here to stay which means the fed must continually fund the treasury market and this will transfer directly into consumer inflation. They could also refuse to buy the debt, let interest rates rise and destroy the financial markets. If you look around Dublin, Cork and Galway you can see the massive student apartment boom that is nearing completion. My guess is when these are completed, the economy will enter recession and rents and property prices will be crushed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    pearcider wrote: »
    Hard to say which option they will choose. As corporate America is already maxed out on debt (hence stock market all time highs) and property also has no room to grow, QE4 will mean massive increases in government transfer payments which are consumed. The CBO predicts trillion dollar deficit are here to stay which means the fed must continually fund the treasury market and this will transfer directly into consumer inflation. They could also refuse to buy the debt, let interest rates rise and destroy the financial markets. If you look around Dublin, Cork and Galway you can see the massive student apartment boom that is nearing completion. My guess is when these are completed, the economy will enter recession and rents and property prices will be crushed.

    So your solid prediction is a massive crash in both rents and house prices in the next 12-24 months?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,969 ✭✭✭Assetbacked


    With minimal properties being built, prices have gone up very quickly and have not been matched with a similar increase in wages. The increases are purely based on demand outweighing supply. As supply is finally picking up, prices will come down steadily, not because of a recession or lack of growth etc. but as part of the correction of the imbalance between supply and demand.

    In addition, as rents continue to rise, it gets harder for people to save for the deposit to purchase a house so either prices fall or demand falls away as a result of this. Again, it's safe to say rents have gone up too quickly and not in line with wages and the cost of living, it's purely to due demand outweighing supply.

    As for the great recession people talk of, there are certain creaks across the global economy which start to feed into a change in mood and mindset (e.g. Brexit, Deutsche Bank's massive derivative exposure to Wall St banks, S&P 500 growing consistently perhaps artificially due to funds based on it, US China trade war), but it is impossible to pinpoint the point in time a recession will occur and how it might impact different countries. As such, it's a rather moot point in the context of the Irish residential property market.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,205 ✭✭✭✭hmmm


    With minimal properties being built, prices have gone up very quickly and have not been matched with a similar increase in wages. The increases are purely based on demand outweighing supply. As supply is finally picking up, prices will come down steadily, not because of a recession or lack of growth etc. but as part of the correction of the imbalance between supply and demand.
    I'm not sure there's much scope for price falls. Developers are not making huge profits, and there's a minimum price beyond which it is not economic to build housing - so supply falls if prices fall. It would take something dramatic to make a big impact e.g. a huge drop in levies or the price of land.

    The rental market certainly has plenty to fall, and hopefully it will - there's lots more supply being built, and student apartments etc will free up space, but unfortunately there is also a lot of NIMBY-type opposition which is holding things up. I see that the Minister is talking about making some changes which may help to speed up the process, and that can only be good.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    .. And the population still increasing...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 416 ✭✭rosmoke


    hmmm wrote: »
    I'm not sure there's much scope for price falls. Developers are not making huge profits, and there's a minimum price beyond which it is not economic to build housing - so supply falls if prices fall. It would take something dramatic to make a big impact e.g. a huge drop in levies or the price of land.

    The rental market certainly has plenty to fall, and hopefully it will - there's lots more supply being built, and student apartments etc will free up space, but unfortunately there is also a lot of NIMBY-type opposition which is holding things up. I see that the Minister is talking about making some changes which may help to speed up the process, and that can only be good.

    How many developers you know?
    They do make loads of money, at least the ones I know.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,213 ✭✭✭Mic 1972


    hmmm wrote: »
    I'm not sure there's much scope for price falls. Developers are not making huge profits, and there's a minimum price beyond which it is not economic to build housing - so supply falls if prices fall. It would take something dramatic to make a big impact e.g. a huge drop in levies or the price of land.

    The rental market certainly has plenty to fall, and hopefully it will - there's lots more supply being built, and student apartments etc will free up space, but unfortunately there is also a lot of NIMBY-type opposition which is holding things up. I see that the Minister is talking about making some changes which may help to speed up the process, and that can only be good.

    The rental market doesn't have plenty to fall. Renting is risky and is heavily taxed, if rents fall below a certain amount a lot of landlords will stop renting out and people will be stuck with fewer properties to choose from


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    hmmm wrote: »
    Developers are not making huge profits

    Where ye getting this observation from?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    pearcider wrote: »
    Hard to say which option they will choose. As corporate America is already maxed out on debt (hence stock market all time highs) and property also has no room to grow, QE4 will mean massive increases in government transfer payments which are consumed. The CBO predicts trillion dollar deficit are here to stay which means the fed must continually fund the treasury market and this will transfer directly into consumer inflation. They could also refuse to buy the debt, let interest rates rise and destroy the financial markets. If you look around Dublin, Cork and Galway you can see the massive student apartment boom that is nearing completion. My guess is when these are completed, the economy will enter recession and rents and property prices will be crushed.

    Hyper inflation looks the most likely ending.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,205 ✭✭✭✭hmmm


    Mic 1972 wrote: »
    The rental market doesn't have plenty to fall. Renting is risky and is heavily taxed, if rents fall below a certain amount a lot of landlords will stop renting out and people will be stuck with fewer properties to choose from
    There's lots of money to be made in the current market by REITs etc building thousands of apartments to rent. The market is obviously frothy - even with a substantial decrease on current rent levels, it would still make sense to build buy-to-rent. It might be risky for individual landlords, but the government has clearly decided that it wants to favour corporate lenders over individual investors (a good thing in my view, but hamfistedly implemented).

    That froth doesn't appear to me to be in the for-sale market. A substantial fall in prices would very quickly see supply being cut, as it is we seem to be at or about meeting current demand.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    Where ye getting this observation from?

    Read the glenveagh or cairn annual reports to get an understanding of the margins they expect on an average project

    Unless the land was purchased very cheaply margins aren’t big


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    Cyrus wrote: »
    Read the glenveagh or cairn annual reports to get an understanding of the margins they expect on an average project

    Unless the land was purchased very cheaply margins aren’t big

    Margins quoted at 17% give or take. This would suggest they are making plenty money.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    Margins quoted at 17% give or take. This would suggest they are making plenty money.

    Gross margins at that level suggest nothing of the sort


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    Cyrus wrote: »
    Gross margins at that level suggest nothing of the sort

    What would you like to see the margins being? Property is already at an affordability ceeling at many levels. The cost of building won't be dropped by Government policy I think that much is clear.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 428 ✭✭Compak


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    What would you like to see the margins being? Property is already at an affordability ceeling at many levels. The cost of building won't be dropped by Government policy I think that much is clear.

    Well half the people here think a 20 - 25% haircut is to be expected to new property prices.
    Whether 17% is a rich return or not it clearly shows anything into a double figure drop and developers will cease building or start building cheaper.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 31,138 ✭✭✭✭Lumen


    Cyrus wrote: »
    Gross margins at that level suggest nothing of the sort

    Are they self financing? i.e. does that 17% include cost of capital?

    The 17% means little without a timeframe for the capital expenditure. 17% over one year is great. Over 10 years terrible. This is why "vulture" funds prefer to get out quick. Hanging around destroys annualised returns.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    What would you like to see the margins being? Property is already at an affordability ceeling at many levels. The cost of building won't be dropped by Government policy I think that much is clear.

    Those margins are sustainable but a large drop in prices mean they won’t be a production will stop again


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    Lumen wrote: »
    Are they self financing? i.e. does that 17% include cost of capital?

    The 17% means little without a timeframe for the capital expenditure. 17% over one year is great. Over 10 years terrible. This is why "vulture" funds prefer to get out quick. Hanging around destroys annualised returns.

    Read the annual reports answers are all there for you


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    Lumen wrote: »
    Are they self financing? i.e. does that 17% include cost of capital?

    The 17% means little without a timeframe for the capital expenditure. 17% over one year is great. Over 10 years terrible. This is why "vulture" funds prefer to get out quick. Hanging around destroys annualised returns.

    Both the homebuilders Iisted are plcs. They sold shares to raise their cash. The capital is effectively free. No price on loans. Both those a fore mentioned home builders have also bought close to a billion euro worth of land they current are sitting on.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    Compak wrote: »
    Well half the people here think a 20 - 25% haircut is to be expected to new property prices.
    Whether 17% is a rich return or not it clearly shows anything into a double figure drop and developers will cease building or start building cheaper.

    I'd be very surprised if one if the home builders would stop building. They have sizable work forces built up and and assets that wont stop depreciating. Not to mention all the prepaid land. Its more likely they will keep building even if the enivitable happen and prices get a small "haircut". Stopping building isn't really an option in the short term.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    Both the homebuilders Iisted are plcs. They sold shares to raise their cash. The capital is effectively free. No price on loans. Both those a fore mentioned home builders have also bought close to a billion euro worth of land they current are sitting on.

    They have no borrowings ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    I'd be very surprised if one if the home builders would stop building. They have sizable work forces built up and and assets that wont stop depreciating. Not to mention all the prepaid land. Its more likely they will keep building even if the enivitable happen and prices get a small "haircut". Stopping building isn't really an option in the short term.

    They can and they will ,

    People here are talking about 25 percent decreases that’s not a small haircut


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 32,285 Mod ✭✭✭✭The_Conductor


    Cyrus wrote: »
    They can and they will ,

    People here are talking about 25 percent decreases that’s not a small haircut

    Proper taxation on vacant sites- and they'll keep building. What they'll build is another matter- but if there is a decent stick involved, the imperative will be to stop hoarding zoned land- and either rezone it or develop it.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,506 ✭✭✭fliball123


    Cyrus wrote: »
    They can and they will ,

    People here are talking about 25 percent decreases that’s not a small haircut




    where are people getting 25% decreases thats not happening the basic principal of supply and demand will mean decreases will be small. Or put it this way if the gov stopped the 20/10% deposit rule or the 3.5 times income people would be buying more. Those two rules have put a celling on property prices if either goe watch prices go back up.


  • Registered Users Posts: 428 ✭✭Compak


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    I'd be very surprised if one if the home builders would stop building. They have sizable work forces built up and and assets that wont stop depreciating. Not to mention all the prepaid land. Its more likely they will keep building even if the enivitable happen and prices get a small "haircut". Stopping building isn't really an option in the short term.

    And getting rid of those sizable workforces will be the first cost saving measure.

    Then sale of distressed assets

    We all know how it goes. I am sure all on here lived through 2008+.

    Why do people think 'this time will be different'

    Edit: And I know people are saying this will be much milder and they're all waiting for 5-10% drops.
    The truth is when prices are dropping that's when it's hardest to buy and many of those saying they would buy, now mvoe the goalpost and wait for 10-20% drops.
    Again, look at 2013, 'experts' calling for more down even after 50%.
    It never works out like people think.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 196 ✭✭karenalot


    Compak wrote: »

    Why do people think 'this time will be different'

    This. People seem to think that houses will drop 25% and they will finally get that dream home in Clontarf. Builders will keep on building, banks will give out mortgages despite immediate negative equity being a threat, no jobs will be lost and everyone will still get annual pay rises.

    Then there is reality.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,619 ✭✭✭✭mariaalice


    karenalot wrote: »
    This. People seem to think that houses will drop 25% and they will finally get that dream home in Clontarf. Builders will keep on building, banks will give out mortgages despite immediate negative equity being a threat, no jobs will be lost and everyone will still get annual pay rises.

    Then there is reality.

    Unless they are dense/ a troll/ or have a we are all doomed type personality, most know that a 25% drop would not be good thing all round, its more a sort of daydream coping mechanism, its very hard on people who genuinely don't see any chance of owning their own home.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,209 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    fliball123 wrote: »
    where are people getting 25% decreases thats not happening

    they are picking the figure that they feel will make it most likely for them to be able to afford whatever it is they want wherever they want mostly :pac:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,506 ✭✭✭fliball123


    Cyrus wrote: »
    they are picking the figure that they feel will make it most likely for them to be able to afford whatever it is they want wherever they want mostly :pac:


    Well I guess its an opinion just love to know if there is anything concrete to back it up. I mean if I was a betting man I would say about 10% drop over teh next 18 months then it climbing again once brexit has been dealt with, but thats simply a gut feeling nothing concrete to back it up


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,502 ✭✭✭q85dw7osi4lebg


    You have to remember folks, those who already own a home do not obsess or fantasize about the property market on a regular basis. There will always be a cognitive bias in threads like this, for prices to come down.

    That's not to say they won't, as everything is cyclical.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 651 ✭✭✭Nika Bolokov


    You have to remember folks, those who already own a home do not obsess or fantasize about the property market on a regular basis. There will always be a cognitive bias in threads like this, for prices to come down.

    That's not to say they won't, as everything is cyclical.

    Great point , there's a lot of ; It will be great if prices crash and I'll get a cheap house , forgetting you also may loose your job , your friends and family emigrate and if in the public sector have your pay slashed whilst living in a miserable atmosphere.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,484 ✭✭✭DelBoy Trotter


    Viewed a house in Sandyford 3 months ago, was priced at €380k. Just checked the property price register, and it sold for €481k :eek: It was a bit under priced when it went up, but I didn't think it would hit that figure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,585 ✭✭✭Mickiemcfist


    Viewed a house in Sandyford 3 months ago, was priced at €380k. Just checked the property price register, and it sold for €481k :eek: It was a bit under priced when it went up, but I didn't think it would hit that figure.

    Jaysus, just checked it there - I was at that one too. It was lovely inside in fairness but the area is fairly dodgy so I didn't bid. That's mental I was thinking it'd end up at 425ish.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,889 ✭✭✭SozBbz


    Jaysus, just checked it there - I was at that one too. It was lovely inside in fairness but the area is fairly dodgy so I didn't bid. That's mental I was thinking it'd end up at 425ish.

    Found the house online with a bit of googling ;)

    Not my cup of tea but goes to show that houses that would tick a lot of boxes for a lot of people are still going for serious money.

    Also, I think people are willing to pay for turnkey condition because the costs of renovations at the moment are extortionate.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,484 ✭✭✭DelBoy Trotter


    Jaysus, just checked it there - I was at that one too. It was lovely inside in fairness but the area is fairly dodgy so I didn't bid. That's mental I was thinking it'd end up at 425ish.

    While it is an ex council estate, that area is very quiet these days


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,484 ✭✭✭DelBoy Trotter


    SozBbz wrote: »
    Found the house online with a bit of googling ;)

    Not my cup of tea but goes to show that houses that would tick a lot of boxes for a lot of people are still going for serious money.

    Also, I think people are willing to pay for turnkey condition because the costs of renovations at the moment are extortionate.

    I wouldn’t say it was in the perfect turnkey condition, but it was in a lot better condition than a lot of houses on the market that we’ve seen. The ad didn’t show any pics of the upstairs bathroom, and there was a reason for that....it needed a new one! Otherwise, the house could have done with a tidy up and lick of paint, and new carpets if I’m remember correctly, but nothing that was needed straight away. If the price hadn’t gone so mad, we would have put in a bid


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,585 ✭✭✭Mickiemcfist


    While it is an ex council estate, that area is very quiet these days

    True it's a lot quieter than it was & to be fair I couldn't see anything rough about it at all. When you google the estate (News section) there seems to be one or two fairly dodgy families there - namely a convicted murderer. For 400k plus I'd want somewhere away from that.

    Yea for me the house was relatively turn key - i.e. remodelling needed to be done but you could move in & work away. The extension & kitchen were lovely.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,740 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Cyrus wrote: »
    People here are talking about 25 percent decreases that’s not a small haircut


    Given the recent rise in average household size, due to adults living at home, there is huge latent demand for housing in Ireland.

    Also note that there is no over-supply or excessive construction.

    Households balance sheets have been rebuilt

    There will not be any 25% fall in house prices.

    They may stop rising, and that is good.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,997 ✭✭✭✭Cuddlesworth


    Geuze wrote: »
    Given the recent rise in average household size, due to adults living at home, there is huge latent demand for housing in Ireland.

    Also note that there is no over-supply or excessive construction.

    Households balance sheets have been rebuilt

    There will not be any 25% fall in house prices.

    They may stop rising, and that is good.

    Damm straight, house prices are only based on household income and not other factors like the world and local economy, consumer confidence, the availability of credit, emigration, regulations like building standards and government incentives like HTB or anything else.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,171 ✭✭✭dor843088


    Viewed a house in Sandyford 3 months ago, was priced at €380k. Just checked the property price register, and it sold for €481k :eek: It was a bit under priced when it went up, but I didn't think it would hit that figure.

    The old rope a dope. Get them through the door get them to "fall in love " with the property then the EA will turn on the milking machine . "Youv been out bid " " the seller is looking for a bit more " " do you think that bid will scare anyone off ?" " a little bit more and I think they'll sell " . Lol


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,502 ✭✭✭q85dw7osi4lebg


    dor843088 wrote: »
    The old rope a dope. Get them through the door get them to "fall in love " with the property then the EA will turn on the milking machine . "Youv been out bid " " the seller is looking for a bit more " " do you think that bid will scare anyone off ?" " a little bit more and I think they'll sell " . Lol

    And they end up getting the best price possible for the owner. It’s a no brainer to use an agent to sell your home really.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,511 ✭✭✭OwlsZat


    And they end up getting the best price possible for the owner. It’s a no brainer to use an agent to sell your home really.

    Such a backward system. Trust us for total Paddy Wackery!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,349 ✭✭✭Padre_Pio


    OwlsZat wrote: »
    Such a backward system. Trust us for total Paddy Wackery!

    You'll be thanking that system if you're ever selling.

    EA got my parents a price way above what they were expecting. That man earned his commission.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 460 ✭✭mcbert


    Padre_Pio wrote: »
    You'll be thanking that system if you're ever selling.

    EA got my parents a price way above what they were expecting. That man earned his commission.

    But what if you pick the wrong EA?


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