Originally posted by sasguru
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Reply to: 1 in 79 Brits are property millionaires
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Previously on "1 in 79 Brits are property millionaires"
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Originally posted by Lance View PostIt is not a bubble when demand simply outstrips supply.
Whether that is the case for all the inflated housing costs I am not sure. I can't comment for London as I don't live there, but where I live it's not a bubble and rental prices are not a million miles away from buy prices. So BTL isn't a cash-cow but more a long term investment.
We still have an obsession with property over here but will that one day end? Who knows
IMO the press, everyone encourages the bubble. I'm hearing from my soruces property is a hard sale at the moent, it's a weird year, yet apparently property prices hit their record in AUgust. I'm suspicious myself. If turnover is low it's difficult to know real prices (bit like an stock that has poor liquidity). Late last year the market was buoyant but don't seem to be the case at present.
PS I own my own home,no mortgage but I still think we pay way too much and people paying the current prices are just daft......IMO
Also lets not forget the prices have been propped up due to very low interest rates and easing....give us 8% interest rates and people will be on the streets given people cant stop themselves ****** their money away on gadgets and other nonsense. Read around and most brits apparently have less than £1000 in savings....apparently.
Keep on telling people prices are rising, make them believe they'll never lose money on property and on and on it goes....until one day ......Last edited by SuperZ; 8 September 2017, 21:27.
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Originally posted by mattfx View Post...Pretty sure they regret that....
Similarly now there are 10 year fixed for around 3% (last time I looked) it's the same conundrum, fix or bet against mortgage rate rises (not necessarily BOE base rate rises) over that term by staying on a variable/tracker.
I think the calcs I did some time ago showed it was better to wait for lower purchase price and therefore mortgage required even at the risk of a higher interest rate, than to go in at a high purchase price but with a low interest rate. That's at historically typical rates of around 5% or normal variance over lifetime of a mortgage.
Like all those on housepricecrash I'm tired of waiting for sense to return to the housing market, where normal folk on normal wages can afford a pile of bricks without skinting themselves and their partner. Oh for the days of old when apparently a normal couple could survive on a single wage, with a mortgage and kids. Something's gone wrong somewhere.
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Yes but it is those agreements that have allowed investors in Life insurance policies to earn a higher rate of return on their investments,
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Originally posted by eek View PostYep I screwed up in 2006 when expecting inflation to hit moved from a tracker loan to a fixed rate loan - in retrospect that wasn't the best move but I didn't think the central banks would be this blooming useless.
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Originally posted by eek View PostThat tells you everything you need to know about Asset bubbles, the current state of the UK economy and the reasons behind the current state of the UK economy...
Whether that is the case for all the inflated housing costs I am not sure. I can't comment for London as I don't live there, but where I live it's not a bubble and rental prices are not a million miles away from buy prices. So BTL isn't a cash-cow but more a long term investment.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostThe 3, 4 or 5 feckless families we support with the 6-figure taxes we pay every year as a household might disagree when we decide to pay it somewhere else.
I do hope more high earners (the so-called "elite") fuck off out of the UK, post Brexit, just so people understand how their precious benefits system, NHS, police and army etc. etc.are all paid for.
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Originally posted by shaunbhoy View PostI think the notion of you "minimising your footprint in the UK" is something we can all rally behind.
I do hope more high earners (the so-called "elite") fuck off out of the UK, post Brexit, just so people understand how their precious benefits system, NHS, police and army etc. etc.are all paid for.
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Originally posted by Elliegirl View PostLord I wish people would stop boring on about this.
It's a disaster. Nothing more or less. I have a house in London. The mortgage is paid off. Goody for me. What about my nieces, nephews? where and how are they going to bring up their children in the future when property is bought and sold like commodities? how can you put roots down in a community, send your kids to school, all the usual things that security of tenure gives you? I was on a forum some years ago called Housepricecrash. I think I joined around 2006. They had been predicting a crash since then driven by high interest rates. This is not the 80s. It's different because there are far too many vested interests involved to break the market with interest rates hikes. You really think the establishment are going to destroy their BTL empires with high interest rates? No. We will continue as usual. In this stupid, stupid mess.
You're right, it's a total mess & nobody's going to do anything to address the problem.
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Originally posted by Elliegirl View PostLord I wish people would stop boring on about this.
It's a disaster. Nothing more or less. I have a house in London..
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Originally posted by pjclarke View Post
millionaires are what they used to be considering the value of the currency in recent years has dropped 30% against the euro, how is one to purchase that holiday villa in lake como now?
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postaccording to the Torygraph 1 in 79 Brits is now a millionaire thanks to property
Surging house prices mean one in 79 Britons is now a millionaire
how cool is that !
how many here are as Sue would say, high net worth individuals ?
Milan.
It's a disaster. Nothing more or less. I have a house in London. The mortgage is paid off. Goody for me. What about my nieces, nephews? where and how are they going to bring up their children in the future when property is bought and sold like commodities? how can you put roots down in a community, send your kids to school, all the usual things that security of tenure gives you? I was on a forum some years ago called Housepricecrash. I think I joined around 2006. They had been predicting a crash since then driven by high interest rates. This is not the 80s. It's different because there are far too many vested interests involved to break the market with interest rates hikes. You really think the establishment are going to destroy their BTL empires with high interest rates? No. We will continue as usual. In this stupid, stupid mess.
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