Not as easy at all to reposses homes in Ireland, some lawyers have made their very health livings out of opposing repos on numerous grounds but I'd agree with the general point you make
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Just to add further fuel to this. The ERSI says the averge price paid for a house has dropped 4.7% in the last twelve months. October produced the 8th successive decline in house prices. http://www.rte.ie/business/2007/1123/house.html Another year like this and we'll have a near 10% drop in two years.
Any chance we can please stop misquoting the PTSB/ESRI survey as being representative of house prices.
This index has been repeated rubbished (see earlier in thread) as it uses valuations rather than actual sale prices.
Actual prices falls are likely to be significantly higher as the ESRI index includes lots of properties with unrealistically high valuations that unsurprisingly haven't shifted and have no hope of shifting at the valuation price.
We are already over the 10% fall that you refer to. Well over in some areas.
Rant over.
I agree with you, ORA, but what else can we use? If the the ERSI is registering decreases it's at least an indication that prices are falling.
The only value of that report is when you compare with previous versions of it but debatable what use that is. That report shows a significant difference in property outside Dublin which probably makes sense as easier to travel an extra 10 miles (cheaper property) than it is in Dublin region.
I see one of the "leading" property firms has been running a fullpage ad in many papers over the last week stating that "there's never been a better time to buy"......
I'm not au fait with misleading advertising laws but this strikes me as being on the verge of being as such (not to mention in all probability being plain inaccurate).
Market consensus now appears to be sustained falls across the board through 2008, with recovery in 2009.
But why would you believe a body of opinion who have continued to be wrong throughout this year and many of whom are openly admitting they "underestimated the negative sentiment"? Particularly when the Economist and many other international publications have been warning about Ireland's bubble for years (along with a few notable Irish economists, McWilliams among them).
Given commodity prices appear to be on a steep upward trajectory with no sign of reducing, are we in danger of stagflation?
Most of the usual suspects (bank and property company economists).
Tribune or Business Post (can't remember which) did a piece by 5 or 6 of the usual suspects yesterday.
Basis for recovery appeared to be relying on the following happening:
1) interest rate falls next year
2) drop in new housing stock means new demand from potential FTBs who are renting pushes prices up
3) rocketing rents lure Buy-to-Let investors back into the market
Personally I'm doubtful on one, and on two and three, I can't seem to reconcile the huge number of empty apartments in Dublin (per census and other studies) with the rocketing rents that apparently we are seeing.
Apparently developers are starting to rent unsold new apartments to help cashflow (Gasworks cited as an example).
I see the Indo, one of the main papers for talking up the market, don't even bother to do so anymore. For the last few weeks they've begun to print doom and gloom articles. See here: http://www.independent.ie/opinion/an...m-1254826.html
The "Ah sure, wait for the autumn selling season" and "Ah sure, wait until the spring 2008 season" have been replaced by admissions that the slump will last well into 2009 at least. A lot of papers were insisting that ECB rates will drop soon too, that talk has kind of faded. If you ask me there's at least another 0.25% rate increase coming in the next few months. The ECB's main task is to control inflation and it's not coming down. Trichet even admitted that at a recent ECB council meeting there was support for putting the rates up.
It would take a foolish person to argue against the property market being Donald Ducked for the foreseeable future.
Here's an example of how the media, specifically Fox News, continues to try and blow smoke up the publics butt with regard to real estate. Isn't it great to live in a society where you can say anything you want, and be a pundit for whoever will pay you (whether you believe in the position or not), and you will never be held accountable for what you said?
The way they laughed at Peter Schiff(one smart dude!) in both the 1/07 and 1/08 clips reminds me of how they laugh at Ron Paul. Discredit them by laughing -- makes you look cool, and Joe Public will take your side ('cause we know he's not gonna investigate the facts for himself).
Next time you hear someone on (Insert your favourite here) pumping up the stock market or housing market, remember this lesson.
I switched off when I saw the overlay saying "doesn't he look like a cross between" yadda yadda. This is supposed to be more credible than Fox News? Please.
I have no time for Fox News, but if the person that made that video wants intelligent people to watch it, they should drop that kind of childish idiocy.
adam
can anyone advise on the viabillity of buyiny a residential property in ireland at the moment.iwould like to hear informed opinions please
Depends on what you're trying to achieve. As an investment, to rent, to live in? Where? What size? What budget have you? Etc.
Informartive article here
Highlights.
- From November 2006 to 2007 prices fell 6% Nationwide (does not account for freebies included in prices)
- Dublin 2005-2006 prices increased 16%
- Dublin 2004-2005 prices increased 10%
- Number of mortgages issued have reduced 25%
At the moment, it is a very bad time to buy. Despite the fact that there is NO interest in 80% of residential properties most owners are refusing to reduce asking prices in the hope that the market recovers which is of course impossible.
The economy is in a state of emergency due to mis managemnt by our government members, external affairs not much better with the USA in a resession due to the various wars which helped fuel inflation over the last few years and basically things are bleak for employment.
Basically, don't buy anything for at least another 18 months. Your investment will be losing value by the day otherwise. :o
No they didn't. Asking prices/valuations fell 6%. Which in a falling market is a woefully understated measure.
Sorry for banging on about the uselessness of the PTSB index, but what else would you expect a property lender to produce other than ridiculously overstated figures.
Likely drop is completion prices is more in the 10-15% space over 2007.
it must be noted how the commercial sector still has a major role to play in the sustainability and the stability of the residential market, aswel as the economy itself. Certain developments need to be as modern and regulated as possible to be on par with other major cities in the EU which will in turn help the economy to become less dependent on 'property' itself, thus creating an equilibrium between the market values and the demand/supply ratios in the future. This is long term reality ~ at best! IMO
I knew there was some report like that but could not remember which one. The fact the ESRI part of this fooled me. Is there any independent survey that record sale prices?
Interestingly some Irish guy who sits on EU Central Bank board (can't find link) said today that 6% fall was not accurate & closer to 15%.
Still not in crash mode. I think would need to see addition of people unable to offload property & does not seem enough people desperate enough yet. I would think this quiet time for home sales so might be more accurate come March-May? I feel would need prolonged recession to start this freefall.
Free fall away, lads, we'll probably be in the market this summer :)
I'm holding off myself for another year, but telling the OP not to buy is the wrong answer imho. Everyone has different circumstances; some people have to buy whether they like it or not. And you can't lose in a well thought-out long-term property buy.
adam
I don't know if this is the right thread for it but heard ads on the radio the other day advertising property in India. Apparently it rose as much as 70% last year and Meryll Lynch predict that will continue for the best part of a decade. Too good to be true? Surely if that was the case, anybody even considering investing in the irish property market (for profit rather than for a home) would have their heads turned?
Any else noticed those adverts for mortgage agencies "no proof of income, bad credit history, let us get you a mortgage..."
If in those circumstances maybe should you really be taking out what is basically a 30-40 year loan at rates above high street banks? :rolleyes:
If location is important & have permanent job for life as will to see home value fall in the near future then could be ok buying a home. As long as interest rates don't rise you would be ok.
Concerted effort in most of the papers over the last week to portray the property downturn as being effectively over.
Lots of the usual suspects being rolled out to recount stories of how new development launches are being overrun with people and selling out on the first day.
In actual fact the only reason the new supply is shifting is that the banks are forcing builders and developers to sell, regardless of price(many with c20% price drops from previous phases...)., to reduce their exposure.
The second hand market appears to still be dead, interesting whether this changes as we move into spring. The new market will always drop in price quicker as developers can't sit on stock forever whereas movers can sit almost indefinitely, which is what has happened over the last 18 months.
Personally I wouldn't touch the market yet given the wider economic concerns. Although at least interest rate increases don't seem as likely (people still woefully optimistic about ECB cutting rates though).
Rent prices seem to be going up again. I'm seeing silly money prices for 3 beds in Cork county, in the same region we were seeing 4 beds just a month or two ago. €900+ for a 3 bed is just ridiculous like.
adam
That's mad alright. My mortgage isn't much higher than that.
I'd say the Ritchies will be on the move in 2008. Houses that were out of our grasp less than a year ago (on asking price alone) are now starting to become achieveable. Wherever we go we'll likely be there for a decade or two so I'm not too worried about negative equity.
The house we've been in these last five years, in a local authority area, has (had more like) increased about 60% in value in that period but even if that all fell away (which it hardly will) between now and us leaving we'd have lived rent free for five years.
The Dahamstas are waiting another year, both because we feel it's right to wait, and because we have to whether we like it or not. :)
Moving again in two weeks time, to a house in the (rural) estate we're like to buy in next year. 5th move in 4 years. I reckon the next one'll have wheels on!
adam
The trend Continues, Manor Park dropped prices in their Hansfield Ongar Development by up to 80,000 for terraced house styles and Park Developments dropped there price by 100,000 for Leopardstown development, this follows on from the well documented drop by Capel Developments for phase 2 launch of Apartment scheme in Ashtown leaving very disgruntled phase 1 buyers with massive negative equity, expect other big guns to follow suit in the coming month the traditional spring launch will I suspect be another damp squib!!
Looks like it has stared:
http://www.independent.ie/business/i...s-1288359.htmlQuote:
Cost of rent stops rising as supply doubles
THE number of rental properties available across the country has almost doubled in just one year.
It highlights the increasing pressure on the property market and signals how some are struggling to service their mortgage debts.
The survey, by property website Daft.ie, shows that it has directly resulted in a stagnation of rental prices for the first time in four years. The survey of rents in the last quarter of 2007 shows that the average rent nationwide remains unchanged at €1,388.
Heard on the radio earlier that the number of mortgages is down 22%, value of mortgages down 15%.
adam
We have lots of crap and it increases every time, but not a lot of big furniture so it's not too bad. Plus I drive a van, and that makes things a lot easier.
I've allowed for two more moves, one to our first house and a second to the house we'll build. I think that's quite enough for anyone!
adam
Rents in central locations will always be strong. One bedroom apartments without parking on Cork Street, Dublin 8 are €1,200.
Two bedroom Galway city centre apartments (without parking) can also fetch €1,200. Only 3 or 4 years ago, the same type of apartment in Galway would probably achieve €850. Madness.
However, in the outskirts of Galway like Knocknacarra (about 4km from city centre/2km from Salthill) there are lots of properties for sale and rent is reasonable. On www.daft.ie , you can get a large 2 bed apartment with parking for €850.
It's all relative to location.
What has location got to do with the general raising of rental prices we're talking about?