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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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Housing in the South East should remain fine really.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:45, 4 replies, latest was 15 years ago)
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:49, Reply)
i had a case in uxbridge where 17 somalian refugees were living in a 3 bed house. they started praying at 4am and when my client asked them to keep it down, the father said: "children must pray"
the children didn't learn anything godly. they ripped up the fenceposts, sharpened the points into spears, and chucked them at my clients in their garden. actually it was hard not to laugh at that part.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:52, Reply)
bleeding clotted blackberries from his gash and screaming about how people don't take his politics seriously in a minute.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:47, Reply)
The latest figures on cash purchases show this. Something like 60% of new homes are unmortgaged. That means another crash is coming.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:47, Reply)
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:51, Reply)
Given that this crash happened to a generation that was used to lots of readily available credit, you'll find there aren't actually all that many people on average incomes with tens of thousands of pounds in the bank.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:52, Reply)
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:55, Reply)
lots and lots of credit debt, no savings to pay it off.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:56, Reply)
Also far more individuals are after their own homes see Broken Briton marriage breakdowns and breakdown of the family life in general
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:58, Reply)
large deposits require the sort of disposable income that inflation is eating into.
Hopefully there'll be a massive crash soon while I'm still renting.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:54, Reply)
Prices of houses have only an incidental relationship to how many houses are on the market.
House prices oscillate due to the amount of money available to buyers, which then has a knock-on effect to availability, not the other way around.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:58, Reply)
*trigger finger*
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:04, Reply)
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:10, Reply)
My parents bought a house in 1983 for around 20k. Before the credit crunch it was worth 250k. In those last twenty years, there wasn't suddenly ten times more people wanting to buy that house. What happened was steady devaluation of the pound, which led to more money being available in loans, which led to house prices going up.
Then the whole buy to let thing took off and pushed the relative value up higher. There are several reasons why buy to let is going to fail and three of them are lack of credit, increasing interest rates and Capital Gains Tax.
The lack of credit is going to drive the drop in relative house prices, the South East isn't immune to that. As interest rate rise, as they will have to if they're going to stop inflation more and more people are going to be in the same position as they were three years ago, only this time there won't be the available bail-out money because interest is already at rock bottom.
The only way house prices aren't going to fall is if they allow inflation to occur.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:16, Reply)
London is it's own special micro climate, because the people that work in the city earn stupid money and so can afford stupid prices for shitty little flats just so they are close to a tube line.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:26, Reply)
central london is one of those. eg my flat is still worth about £150k more than i paid for it about 5 years ago - this is partly because we got a good deal at the time, but mostly because of the location and type of block, meaning that there are a lot of foreign investors/purchasers/governments wanting to buy them. whereas my grandma's house, up in halifax, dropped from about £110k to £80k over the same period.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:22, Reply)
They certainly can't stop this one. They've poured money into it for years and have only managed to get some very slight growth going on at a 0.5% interest rate. They cannot keep that interest rate going without Wiemar levels of inflation.
There's going to be a depression and the sooner they get on with it, the sooner it'll be over.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:47, Reply)
around here people have to mortgage themselves up to the hilt in order to afford somewhere. House prices have little to do with value of property and everything to do with availability of loans.
No loans = price crash. It's as true in the South East as it is anywhere else.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:50, Reply)
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:52, Reply)
can't secure the size of a mortgage they'll need to buy that 180 thousand pound one bedroom flat "starter property" they want. And they can't.
So prices will come down.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 12:54, Reply)
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:01, Reply)
We can discuss this at Blousie's, or talk about something more interesting.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:28, Reply)
I'll bring my waterproof trousers if you like?
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:29, Reply)
I'm sure Noel can talk about walking boots, I'll nod and look interested.
(, Tue 17 May 2011, 13:31, Reply)
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