Originally posted by DaveB
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Previously on "10 little house price drops, all in a row."
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostUnless it's going to take you into negative equity or you are selling up to realise the capital, who cares about house prices? So you dont get as much for yours when you sell it, you wont pay as much for the next one either.
Next it'll be, immigrants aren't stealing our jobs.... and before you know it the daily mail will be out of circulation and we'll all be voting labour (again).
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Unless it's going to take you into negative equity or you are selling up to realise the capital, who cares about house prices? So you dont get as much for yours when you sell it, you wont pay as much for the next one either.
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When mine drops to half it's current value, I'm going to sell up and buy a little place in America.
Washington state, and possibly Pennsylvania (I'll need the coal to keep Washington warm)
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And then there were none
Where are the rhymes?
What happen to all the 10 drops?
Where is the last "and then there were none"....
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostWhat a load of tulip. Our place has increased in value by 8% in the last 12 months...
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If it continues to drop at this rate....................................Ah! who cares?
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What a load of tulip. Our place has increased in value by 8% in the last 12 months... it should have been a lot more but times are tough I guess.
http://www.nationwide.co.uk/hpi/Last edited by scooterscot; 29 July 2008, 22:39.
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I can't wait until we get 12 months. Then we will be able to see what the annual fall pa is going to be.
Muliply by three for the minimum fall before things level off
tim
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And if one little price drop, should accidentally fall, there will be 9.........
IGMC
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10 little house price drops, all in a row.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/mai...pending228.xml
The average property value has fallen by £7,800 since last summer, according to the latest survey to suggest that the slump in the housing market is worsening.
The average home is now worth £168,500 after falling in price for 10 consecutive months, figures from the monthly report published by Hometrack, the property research company, show.
Prices fell 1.2 per cent in July, an acceleration on the previous month's fall of 1 per cent, and May's fall of 0.5 per cent.
The annual rate of decline is 4.4 per cent — the biggest fall since the research company started its monthly survey in 2001.Tags: None
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