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That's great.. unfortunately it has nothing to do with house prices.We actually have government surpluses and look to be increasing them
That's great.. unfortunately it has nothing to do with house prices.
hello,
just taking it all in brother, i wouldnt have a clue what happens in the future
walkin' the streets enjoying life
if you after a home its a great time to be buying
thankyou
robots
Really so its just a coincidence that the biggest losses so far have been taken by countries with the biggest deficiets?
You don't buy went prices are still at all time highs.
On another note, i reckon the biggest mistake to the housing market was to introduce the first home buyers grant. All it did was inflate the price and made people broke - people were using the grant as their deposit and had no money to pay off the house anyways.
Beej,To KiwiCarlos - good posts mate! And there are many here who share much of your point of view. Don't let the property perma-bears bother you - I know guys like that who have been saying the same old stuff since the late 90s.... well they missed out big time! People who hold off buying property now may still do Ok as prices may stay flatish for a while, but I think the people expecting sustained big falls in good areas are simply dreaming!
All the arguments have been hashed out various times through this thread already I think, so I won't rehash my already stated point of view and the arguments to back them up
Cheers,
Beej
Here's a report from the US on their housing market:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080825/bs_nm/usa_economy_housing_dc_3
Interesting to note the reported 7.1% decline in median prices in the past 12 months there (ie since August when the sub-prime crisis and credit crunch really got going), plus a bit of an uptick in sales volume in the latest quarter.
My comment: A 7.1% decline with sales volume now upticking? The impression given here and elsewhere from all the alarmist reports focusing on isolated incidents and similar anecdotal stories, was that the situation in the US was FAR worse than that!
Accounting for inflation, the real fall has been almost 30%. The biggest cities have registered even steeper falls.
Australians have been compounding their debt at an average rate of 15 percent for the past 20 years.
Here's a report from the US on their housing market:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080825/bs_nm/usa_economy_housing_dc_3
Interesting to note the reported 7.1% decline in median prices in the past 12 months there (ie since August when the sub-prime crisis and credit crunch really got going), plus a bit of an uptick in sales volume in the latest quarter.
My comment: A 7.1% decline with sales volume now upticking? The impression given here and elsewhere from all the alarmist reports focusing on isolated incidents and similar anecdotal stories, was that the situation in the US was FAR worse than that!
That's what I've been saying. Don't think many people believe me though.The difference is that the Aussie crisis could be much worse.
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