Originally posted by DimPrawn
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Reply to: Brexit Doom
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Previously on "Brexit Doom"
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostLet's hope it's not this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carthaginian_peaceA Carthaginian peace is the imposition of a very brutal 'peace' by completely crushing the enemy. The term derives from the peace imposed on Carthage by Rome. After the Second Punic War, Carthage lost all its colonies, was forced to demilitarize and pay a constant tribute to Rome and could enter war only with Rome's permission. At the end of the Third Punic War, the Romans systematically burned Carthage to the ground and enslaved its population.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostLet's hope it's not this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carthaginian_peace
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Originally posted by eek View PostGiven the demographics of those who voted for Brexit I can't see how dying (which a lot of them will do naturally at some point in the near future) is bearing the brunt of it....
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View PostAnyone who believes the tripe being spewed by media on Brexit impact on house prices is quite simply being fooled. The property market does not react that quickly; not like the stock market (the FTSE being up over 20% since Brexit... Boom!).
Recent price activity in the UK housing market is purely a result of government intervention. The 3% additional SLDT caused a spike in demand and hence prices in Q1 this year. Much of the rise is now unwinding and I would expect prices to fall even further given the impact of the SLDT changes.
But there is a much bigger beast lurking in Section 24 of the Finance Bill, which will drastically restrict the amount of relief individuals can claim on their property investments. This will start to bite from April 2017 onwards and many investors are preparing for this now by (a) not buying as much property as they would have, and (b) selling portfolios.
Both of these tax changes were devised and announced last year. The property market is now beginning to feel the impact of them and we will see a far greater pronounced effect over the next 2 years.
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Originally posted by eek View PostLinky? I'm not aware of anyone on HPC who believe margin calls exist within owner occupier mortgages. BTL mortgages are rather different although the only examples that are mentioned related to NRAM.
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Anyone who believes the tripe being spewed by media on Brexit impact on house prices is quite simply being fooled. The property market does not react that quickly; not like the stock market (the FTSE being up over 20% since Brexit... Boom!).
Recent price activity in the UK housing market is purely a result of government intervention. The 3% additional SLDT caused a spike in demand and hence prices in Q1 this year. Much of the rise is now unwinding and I would expect prices to fall even further given the impact of the SLDT changes.
But there is a much bigger beast lurking in Section 24 of the Finance Bill, which will drastically restrict the amount of relief individuals can claim on their property investments. This will start to bite from April 2017 onwards and many investors are preparing for this now by (a) not buying as much property as they would have, and (b) selling portfolios. Many left holding will be liable to taxation > rental income and so will fail to pay the mortgage; even if they survive and make a profit, the lenders will revalue values downwards on re-mortgage (already are increasing rental cover %) and hence the re-mortgage loans won't cover the original loans.
Both of these tax changes were devised and announced last year. The property market is now beginning to feel the impact of them and we will see a far greater pronounced effect over the next 2 years.Last edited by ChimpMaster; 15 August 2016, 13:08.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostResidential mortgage "Margin Calls" are a housepricecrash forum fantasy / meme.
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostA little premature, I feel. We're talking about Rightmove asking price statistics, which are notoriously noisy, month to month, and typically show a fairly large decline in July and/or August, because the summer market is slow. You'll see similar declines in 2013/14/15, I expect. I think we're all agreed that London and the SE is in the midst of a spectacular bubble, but it's difficult to see Brexit as a catalyst for large declines, given the historically low supply at present. The collapse in supply over recent years is really astonishing. It's halved in my part part of the SE over the last year or two. Demand would need to drop off a cliff, and I don't see any evidence of that. It would be unfortunate it the market collapsed, given the misery that would cause, but it has been primed to head in one direction or the other, very rapidly, for the past several decades. Indirectly, Brexit probably won't help with an extended period of QE, but it also offers the political cover for fundamental supply-side and tax policy reforms. The Autumn Statement and 2017 Budget will be revealing.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostHousing prices are being driven down by economic weaknesses and uncertainty, which are bad.
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Originally posted by The_Equalizer View PostAre you saying that banks 'call in' mortgages on homeowners in negative equity? Never heard of that one before and surely self-defeating for the banks?
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Originally posted by The_Equalizer View PostAre you saying that banks 'call in' mortgages on homeowners in negative equity? Never heard of that one before and surely self-defeating for the banks?
I have seen them go after btl borrowers though.
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Originally posted by eek View PostGiven the demographics of those who voted for Brexit I can't see how dying (which a lot of them will do naturally at some point in the near future) is bearing the brunt of it....
Or are you still thinking it was only manual workers in Sunderland who voted to leave?
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Originally posted by The_Equalizer View PostLoopy housing costs are not a good thing. Did RoI have a bit of trouble with this too? How many rue the day they got taken in by it all?
It's the same with the decrease in the value of GBP. It will have some upsides, but it is a reflection of weakness and uncertainty.
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