theasxgorilla
Problem solved... next bubble.
- Joined
- 7 December 2006
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The best post for a long time on any RE thread.
Tyson where on earth are you getting this idea from? I agree with what ASXGorilla said.When it comes to giving out loans at fixed rates for long period of times they have to form an opinion and make a best guess and add the risk of their interest payments changing to the rate.
For instance if the bank is going to write you a 5 year fixed interest loan and they just add a standard margin of 2 % then over the 5 years the interest rate that the bank borrows moves up by 3% then the bank is losing money.
Definitely sobering if your only trick from property is buy n hope.Sobering and a little sad...if this is really the end of this rather long cycle it sounds a bit like, "sorry to all the folk who didn't make anything from this boom, there will be another one along in 1 to 2 decades".
Peter Spann is a well known example of a guy who created a small fortune, 0 to a few million or so from buy, renovate and flick in Brisbane during the recession we had to have in the 90's.
It will always work so long as the spread between unimproved and improved value is sufficient.I hope it still works...it's all I know how to do!
Tyson where on earth are you getting this idea from? I agree with what ASXGorilla said.
Sobering and a little sad...if this is really the end of this rather long cycle it sounds a bit like, "sorry to all the folk who didn't make anything from this boom, there will be another one along in 1 to 2 decades".
I hear what you are saying and it's a good point. You don't happen to have a chart of sales volume handy for a comparison against housing finance commitments?There is very little volume .... unless people get forced to sell home owners are the perfect little cartel ... no sales/no listings/no supply/no price falls.
ha ha .. no .. wouldnt know one if I saw one ha ha.
32% clearance rate on northern beaches a week or so back ... no giveaways though ... about as telling as robots 60% week in week out clearances.
One thing Ive learnt through this ... property prices are VERY resilient to sharp falls! Human nature really.
Could that some reason be unemployment? The RBA said today that it is expecting an increase. If that jumps house prices may fall dramatically. Stay tuned...Yes prices are high, but they don't tend to crash for the reason you state - instead sale volume falls dramatically as owners only sell if they have to for some reason, prices fall a little, but 5-10% is the norm, then flatten and stagnate for a while (possibly several years even).
Could that some reason be unemployment? The RBA said today that it is expecting an increase. If that jumps house prices may fall dramatically. Stay tuned...
There is very little volume .... unless people get forced to sell home owners are the perfect little cartel ... no sales/no listings/no supply/no price falls.
Interesting Beej, but not everyone agrees with you.Well, we have had unemployment rates as high as 10% before and believe it or not property prices didn't crash! The thing you have to remember is that when employment is in fact contracting, the people who are *primarily* effected (unfortunately) tend to be the younger, plus the less skilled members of the workforce. These are not, as whole, the section of the population that tends to own property (and therefore may be forced to sell), or that tend to own property in the more desirable areas.
Sure there are exceptions to this (on both sides), but generally speaking skilled workers/professionals are more able to find new jobs, or can more readily re-skill into a new area as required, and are less likely to be over-committed to their mortgage. Also, unemployment tends to cluster around particular geographies, and so might impact a particular suburb, region, or town more severely, but not the city-wide or national property market as a whole in general anywhere as much. In other words, you might see your "bargain" out there at Mt Druitt, but I bet that most of the hopefuls waiting eagerly for a property market crash still won't buy that bargain no matter how cheap. Conversely the areas in which they would want to buy (Sydney Inner West, Lower North Shore, Eastern Suburbs and so on) tend to be the areas least effected by rising unemployment, and are also the area's with lower mortgage commitments on average etc, and therefore the huge price drops just won't be seen in these area's.
One thing Ive learnt through this ... property prices are VERY resilient to sharp falls! Human nature really.
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