Originally posted by jamesbrown
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Buy-to-Let DOOM
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He may well be an idiot but HTB didn't stoke anything. And he isn't reversing anything as prices are unlikely to fall. Just reddressing the balance along Conservative policy. -
You can't be serious? The origins of the recent bubble were in bank lending (i.e. the FLS before the transition to business lending), but HTB was a critical part of this. It extended the market (and hence demand) to those with a 5% deposit who, until HTB, had zero hope of home ownership, as the FLS was mainly reaching those with a large deposit. You can take a view either way about the morality of that, but I think the impacts on demand (and hence prices) are pretty indisputable. It's no coincidence that the market (and wider economy) took off shortly afterwards and the share prices of BDEV and similar quadrupled within a couple of years.Originally posted by GB9 View PostHe may well be an idiot but HTB didn't stoke anything. And he isn't reversing anything as prices are unlikely to fall. Just reddressing the balance along Conservative policy.Comment
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I thought I was a thick chuntOriginally posted by GB9 View PostHe may well be an idiot but HTB didn't stoke anything. And he isn't reversing anything as prices are unlikely to fall. Just reddressing the balance along Conservative policy.
Jesus weepersComment
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I've worked with the relevant data whereas you've almost certainly made assumptions.Originally posted by unemployed View PostI thought I was a thick chunt
Jesus weepersComment
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No, I can be.Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostYou can't be serious? The origins of the recent bubble were in bank lending (i.e. the FLS before the transition to business lending), but HTB was a critical part of this. It extended the market (and hence demand) to those with a 5% deposit who, until HTB, had zero hope of home ownership, as the FLS was mainly reaching those with a large deposit. You can take a view either way about the morality of that, but I think the impacts on demand (and hence prices) are pretty indisputable. It's no coincidence that the market (and wider economy) took off shortly afterwards and the share prices of BDEV and similar quadrupled within a couple of years.
I've spent several years in mortgage analytics and what you might assume from reading and hearing things on the news doesn't always alugn with what has really happened.Comment
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Originally posted by GB9 View PostI've worked with the relevant data whereas you've almost certainly made assumptions.
So you don`t think government props increase house prices ?? you don`t think available credit increases prices ??
you don`t think low interest rates increase prices ??
your post is laughable
Did george email you personally with this wonderful data ??
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Do you think that banks just sit there and gives a big sack of cash to anyone that asks them? If the people are getting the cash then they have passed the lending criteria. That doesn't mean that the house they are buying is worth what they blindly waved at the estate agent but thats the game. I was watching Homes under the Hammer yesterday and some wally ended up paying 70K for a proper dump. First time at an auction and not a clue what it was they bought or how much renovation money would be involved...Originally posted by unemployed View PostSo you don`t think government props increase house prices ?? you don`t think available credit increases prices ??
you don`t think low interest rates increase prices ??
your post is laughable
Did george email you personally with this wonderful data ??
If you are sat on the sidelines competing with idiots like that you either end up renting or you buy your way out of the situation and thats when the house prices go up...Comment
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why do you think they give a toss who they lend to ?? if they don`t pay up they just take the property back.Originally posted by bobspud View PostDo you think that banks just sit there and gives a big sack of cash to anyone that asks them?
more than likely any losses would be taken out of the deposit.
while government policy ensures rises the banks can`t lose .
This whole sorry saga is set up for short term gain , there is no long term plan that`s someone else`s problem.Comment
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Nothing can possibly go wrong if they passed itOriginally posted by bobspud View PostIf the people are getting the cash then they have passed the lending criteria.
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In this context, I'm not sure your experience of mortgage analytics counts for much (at least, your argument is incongruent). This is about the macroeconomics of housing supply/demand and behaviour. If a policy substantially boosts demand (5% deposits) without boosting supply, then prices will rise. Funding for Lending was the start of this process, but HTB accelerated it. You can argue about the details of how cheap money has filtered into particular asset classes (e.g. your mortgage analytics), but the big picture is credit conditions and policies that have eased those conditions, whether directly by HMG or indirectly via the BoE.Originally posted by GB9 View PostNo, I can be.
I've spent several years in mortgage analytics and what you might assume from reading and hearing things on the news doesn't always alugn with what has really happened.Comment
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