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Why would somebody who is having difficulty selling a 'normal' sized house, think that trading up is a good idea?
tim
because they have a growing family and want to buy a bigger house which they would probably live in for 15-20yrs or more.
Why should selling a house now have any implication of buying a bigger house which they might sell in 20 yrs time.
I've also got a friend who are also trying to sell there house and they can't sell either. They don't live on a main road and their house is really nice. He's willing to take a 40K (nearly 8%) hit as he wants to move up the ladder. He's also not in a hurray as the place he wants to buy is around the 700K price. He's saying that all the propertys he's seen at that price are rubbish. Not that much more space and alot of work to be done on them.
Why would somebody who is having difficulty selling a 'normal' sized house, think that trading up is a good idea?
Property probably isn't selling too well right now because of discussions such as this and all the media attention...it is all a conspiracy and Gordo will have given the press a back-hander to scare folk to calm things down again...
Also...even if your mate has dropped his price by 8%...the stats say that prices have risen by 13% this year so he is still up year on year...
Just realised...I'm not thinking of selling...I'm not thinking of buying...I know nothing about the property industry...I know nothing about world economy...so in summary, I neither care about house prices nor have any wisdon on the subject so this whole debate has been turned into a farce by my boredom...
Sorry!
Don't sweat it, on this board, this makes you an expert on the subject!
Property probably isn't selling too well right now because of discussions such as this and all the media attention...it is all a conspiracy and Gordo will have given the press a back-hander to scare folk to calm things down again...
Also...even if your mate has dropped his price by 8%...the stats say that prices have risen by 13% this year so he is still up year on year...
Just realised...I'm not thinking of selling...I'm not thinking of buying...I know nothing about the property industry...I know nothing about world economy...so in summary, I neither care about house prices nor have any wisdon on the subject so this whole debate has been turned into a farce by my boredom...
I'm in the process of selling and buying. I've had to drop the asking price by 10K. Agreed it was slightly over priced but I'm not in a hurray so worth a go.
Didn't even have a stupid offer after 8 viewings. It is on a mainish road but you would of thought some one would have made a cheeky offer.
After the price droped I've only had one person come round in the last 2-3 weeks.
The house has been completly modernised over the last 5 yrs.
I spoke to the estate agent this morning and they said last weekend they had hardly any activity. Usually at the weekend they are always out of the office.
The market has changed considerably over the last few weeks. We've seen many other propertys have had to drop there prices or have also been on the market for months. A couple we have put offers in for but they were rejected as we hadn't sold. However, the asking price on those houses has now come down to our original offer price.
I've also got a friend who are also trying to sell there house and they can't sell either. They don't live on a main road and their house is really nice. He's willing to take a 40K (nearly 8%) hit as he wants to move up the ladder. He's also not in a hurray as the place he wants to buy is around the 700K price. He's saying that all the propertys he's seen at that price are rubbish. Not that much more space and alot of work to be done on them.
The prices can't go up every month, and certainly not at the rate we are used to recently, and there may be an odd blip where they dip for a couple of weeks...but year on year house prices will rise unless there is a major international conflict...
Baz got it right...
Accept certain inalienable truths, prices will rise, politicians will philander,
you too will get old and when you do you’ll fantasize that when you were young prices were reasonable, politicians were noble and children respected their elders
I see Fuxton's are selling up - What can they see coming? Must be a sure sign that the London housing market is going to go belly up. Rats leaving the sinking ship etc etc
"London estate agency Foxtons has been sold to private equity firm BC Partners for an undisclosed amount, reported to be about £400m.
Set up in 1981, the firm has 20 branches in London and the south-east of England and generated sales of more than £100m last year.
Foxtons and sister firm Alexander Hall, a mortgage broker also being sold, were owned by their founder Jon Hunt.
Like other agents, Foxtons has benefited from London's property boom"
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