says Miss Whiplash
you tell 'em AP
you go girl
Milan.
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Reply to: Ouch, what to say ?
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Previously on "Ouch, what to say ?"
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostIn 2007, property prices in Spain were sky high. You could also get 1.5 Euros to a quid.
Now, property prices in Spain have fallen, but so has the pound (thanks to BoE and New Lie mismanagement).
As a sterling buyer, property in Spain is no cheaper than it was in the boom times.
Something to bare in mind.
you either live there and earn money
you rent it and earn
make profit when you sell
or it cheap to live there on money you earned somewhere else
Spending 100's K on a villa or apartment in Spain didn't add up to me.
No chance of earning in Spain.
Security is an issue, so it may cost you more than rental income.
Prices were at the top of the market so no chance of making a profit from selling.
You could buy cheaper and live cheaper other places.
Same way buying in Ireland in the last 8 years didn't add up, buying in Spain didn't add up.
When you see these guys saying I thought I could get work as a tiller, they didn't really check it out.
Sorry no sympathy here.
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Worthless pound
In 2007, property prices in Spain were sky high. You could also get 1.5 Euros to a quid.
Now, property prices in Spain have fallen, but so has the pound (thanks to BoE and New Lie mismanagement).
As a sterling buyer, property in Spain is no cheaper than it was in the boom times.
Something to bare in mind.
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Originally posted by zeitghostNice volcano that island.
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nice looking house though
and for £270,000 - looks interesting, wonder what the rental possibilities are
nice to the AU on the rebound
Milan.
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Originally posted by ThomasSoerensen View PostWhen you set yourself up with income in a different currency from your expenses/investments then really need to do your homework.
When you in addition to that also buys at the top of the marketand cannot tolerate a reduced revaluation then you have left yourself in the hands of the markets, where you have no control, with little margin for error.
It seems her demands for a grand life has triggered hybris.
I find it difficult to feel any sympathy with her.
I am looking for a holiday villa/house at the moment. Going to avoid mainland Spain and will be heading over to the canaries in April.
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When you in addition to that also buys at the top of the marketand cannot tolerate a reduced revaluation then you have left yourself in the hands of the markets, where you have no control, with little margin for error.
It seems her demands for a grand life has triggered hybris.
I find it difficult to feel any sympathy with her.
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Tales from the 1970s
Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostMy dad falls into that category, though he had the sense to buy several properties at £4.50.
... and had to ask the tenants for their rent books because he didn't know how much they were paying...
... to think my parents threatened me with the prospect of being only a milkman after a poor school report.
Sigh.
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Originally posted by Sockpuppet View PostLike most thick people. Being over 55 and having bought a house for £4.50 when they were 28.
A mate bought a roomy end terrace cottage in 1976 for 5K. It wasn't easy to get mortgages on older properties in those days, hence the low price, and his parents lent him the money.
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Originally posted by Sockpuppet View PostLike most thick people. Being over 55 and having bought a house for £4.50 when they were 28.
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostSome people are a bit thick, makes you wonder how they amassed a million in the first place.
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History repeats itself.
The same happened to British pensioners in Spain in the early 1990s.
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