hello,
oh yeah, continue to allow people to post rubbish like above, writings from a failed economist, no mentor of mine but many in bloggosphere love him
on par with UWS
great he coming out with more silly commentary, fantastic
thankyou
associate professor robots
hello,
so prices higher than pre-GFC, higher than 2001 when everyone was waiting for the crash anymore TRUTH you want to discuss
then doomsdayers like Keen, demographia, bubblepedia, GPHC came along and cost thousands across Australia hundreds of thousands of dollars, yeah thats the truth
yet the true phrophets of society are ridiculed, beaten, banned and mocked
but the money box is full, fabulous, how goods this
Trainspotter... I think the level of OO loans has been dropping for close to ten months. Look at the charts below. That has been against a background of rising prices for at least the first six or so of those months. Something is wrong with that picture!
Govt changes in international property investment rules and cashed up investors could help to explain that divergence.Trainspotter... I think the level of OO loans has been dropping for close to ten months. Look at the charts below. That has been against a background of rising prices for at least the first six or so of those months. Something is wrong with that picture!
.'Buy and bail' homeowners get past loan hurdles
August 11, 2010 - 8:28AM
Harvey Collier, a mortgage broker in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, says he gets as many as 10 calls a month from people planning to default on their loans. The twist: They first want financing to buy another home.
Real estate professionals call it "buy and bail," acquiring a new house before the buyer's credit rating is ruined by walking away from the old one because it's "underwater," or worth less than the mortgage. It's an attempt to escape payments on a home whose value may never recover while securing a new property, often at a lower price with a more affordable loan
...The value of US homes fell by a third from 2006 to 2009, as tracked by the S&P/Case-Shiller index. In some areas, the losses were bigger. Prices declined 56 per cent in Las Vegas, 55 per cent in Phoenix and 49 per cent in Miami.
OO's have been dropping for closer to 12 months Mr Z. 28.4% annualised from June to June in fact. What have prices done in this time? Australian house prices have fallen for the first time in 17 months ..... a massive seasonally adjusted ........ wait for it ............ 0.7% !!!!!!
Meanwhile capital city home prices are still up 10.5 per cent (seasonally adjusted) over the past year. RP Data has been forecasting a slowdown in residential property price growth to around 5 per cent this year.
The title of the thread is relevant.
It just comes down to asking how many families can pay 7% interest on $400-500k worth of mortgage. (which in fact is still well below 80% of housing valuation in Melb/Sydney).
There is an interesting story in todays Age on the situation in USA where a number of people are trying to buy a new house before walking away from their old one on which they owe hundreds of thousands more than it is worth. They simply can't/don't want to keep making repayments on houses that are underwater.
Apparently in a number of areas in USA prices have dropped by 30% in the last 3 years.
its a numbers game
“BIS Shrapnel says annual net overseas migration – which includes permanent migration and longer-term but temporary stays – will fall from its pace of 298,900 in the year to June 2009 to 240,000 in the year to June 2010. It will fall more dramatically to 175,000 in 2010-11 and 145,000 in 2011-12.”
game over for some imho
Could have a negative impact on the Mt Kosciusko tourist market though Cam
The relevance of the title of the thread is "property prices" ..... not clearance rates at auctions, not housing affordability, nor is it about declines in OO's borrowing money from the banks. YES these are relevant to the topic BUT we have not seen the MASSIVE downward corrections that some have been squawking about. Wake me up form my slumber when it happens will you please?
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