Home › Forums › Chat Forum › Looks like the housing market is off again…
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Looks like the housing market is off again…
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rebel12Free Member
The greed on show from sellers is astonishing.
100% agree, not right, but then when their agent is telling them they can sell for £££ then can you blame them?
NorthwindFull MemberOne of the fun parts is that at the same time as setting up a cheap-credit-based housing boom, with the obvious dangers of inflation shooting up, we’ve also seemingly accepted below-inflation payrises as being normal. “You should be glad you got that!” So mortgages go up, prices go up, salaries effectively get cut.
tonyg2003Full MemberWhilst I do very much sympathise with you Brooess historically prices don’t particularly crash in the SE and London. I’ve heard people making similar statements as yours – I’m waiting until the crash- in the 90’s, 00’s and now in the present and have house prices ever gone down as opposed to plateauing? No. We’ve just been through the worst recession for centuries and what effect did it have on SE property prices, almost nothing.
twinw4llFree MemberThis sudden buying frenzy is partly being fuelled by the new pension rules, even if punters are 10 years away from pension age they know they can get their hands on a large wodge of cash and getting a mortgage in the meantime to buy an investment property.
I made a few enquiries out of curiosity and was offered 50% loan to value on existing property, interest free, i can see that being too tempting for some people.MrWoppitFree MemberI’m two days into paying back my mortgage and by Tuesday I’ll no longer have to pay for a place to live.
The gaff is currently worth three times what I paid for it. Problem is, so’s everywhere else.
brassneckFull MemberHow do you do it? How do people afford to live in these places? Did you all just have the foresight to buy property in the 80s when they were giving houses away with Green Shield stamps?
Low interest rates and buying & selling 3 times. Threw all our money at the house, drive 10 year old cars, no foreign holidays etc. House is now worth probably 8-10 times my take home depending on which estate agent you believe and where you market it (commutable to several urban centers in under an hour which seems to be the benchmark these days).
It might sound like I was being canny or knew something but the truth is it was the only way I could live somewhere I wanted to live and own it – having been kicked out by a landlord at the start of the mid 90s bubble, wanted to be sure it was in our hands going forward.
I can afford my current home on 6% as I was on a fixed at that when I moved there. But it wasn’t pleasant to do so, and still live any sort of a life.
Sadly there appears to be no end. A crash won’t help, most people will suffer now. No idea how my children will buy somewhere. Maybe it”l return to a rental market with those already owning property getting richer and those who don’t making them so.
molgripsFree MemberNo idea how my children will buy somewhere.
My kids buying houses might co-incide with my parents inheritance. Provided it’s not all spent on care. My grandparents however lived in either council houses or a heavily mortgaged property so I got nothing.
mrmonkfingerFree MemberDid you all just have the foresight to buy property in the 80s when they were giving houses away with Green Shield stamps?
Sums it up. Most folk in decent sized houses have been there a while now.
TBH I wish I’d gone for a massive (at the time) mortgage as soon as I left college in 99. I didn’t, I rented, saved for a few years, ended up buying our first place in late 2009. Waste of time, got me nowhere, in fact, got me far less far than just overextending and waiting for few pay rises to catch up with the cost of a 110% mortgage from inventasalaryforselfcertifiedmortgages.com.
clubberFree MemberI reckon that the buying frenzy is also brought about by a lot of people having stayed put during recession because they couldn’t sell for what they reckoned they should be able to get (or what they paid) but now with the recession ‘over’ that pent up demand to move has burst out and people are getting silly again.
We had six offers at or over asking price when we put our house on the market last June. We’ve finally found somewhere now (having not been willing to play the ‘pay silly money over asking price to secure a house’ game and got a good bit of extra money for our house without any question from our buyer to reflect what’s happened to prices since June.
Stagnation rather than crash seems more likely to me at the moment given the amount of pent up demand that’s still there and is likely to be for some time.
brooessFree MemberI’m not expecting a crash, just a cooling off of the hysteria and outright greed which puts me in a very weak negotiating position…
Although, the bubble has gone up so fast this time, it’s clearly being manipulated rather than a properly functioning price rise based on demand.
Interestingly though, Land Registry data (for Bromley at least) shows prices not going up at anything like the headlines and estate agents’ evaluations would have you think… maybe a few % but certainly not 10+.
100% agree, not right, but then when their agent is telling them they can sell for £££ then can you blame them?
. Yes, I can. You know full well you’re screwing over some young couple who’ve stretched to pay a price way more than you paid. That’s a conscious decision to enrich yourself at someone else’s expense
kimbersFull MemberI forgot that new pension thing, its a classic [whispers] thatcherite [/whispers] brainwave that releases money locked away in pensions and gets them on the chancellors books
mr pension holiday must be proud
clubberFree MemberHow do you do it? How do people afford to live in these places? Did you all just have the foresight to buy property in the 80s when they were giving houses away with Green Shield stamps?
Not me – like mrmonkfinger, I made the mistake of not buying straight out of uni when it was cheap.
Research has paid off for us – bought twice in places that were ok to live in but not really desirable at the time but seemed very likely to go up in value well over the norm over a few years. Did the places up without spending silly money and that seems to have worked well.
DT78Free MemberThey need some hefty tax disincentives for people buying multiple properties and those buying from abroad. Then hopefully there will be less speculative investment (my parents are talking about cashing in pensions and buying a three bed investment property…) so the housing stock is there for people trying to buy their home. We want to sell but I’m really worried about interest rates and negative equity. Meanwhile all our friends are trading up to even bigger mortgages….
megaFree MemberAm overpaying our (to us!) large mortgage while watching friends get caught up in the property ‘race’. In the last 6 months I’ve seen 4 families we know move up to larger / more expensive houses with eye watering mortgages which are really squeezing them.
Round our way there has been a real flurry of housing market activity. With the current low interest rates you can’t help but think a lot of people will be exposed when interest rates start to climb again.
I made a decision a while ago that our mortgage would never be bigger than it is today and am on track to get it payed off by the time I’m 45. This means falling behind ‘The Jonses’ today but hopefully a more comfortable life later. (Unless I get knocked down by an Antelope or something 🙂 )
teamhurtmoreFree MemberThere is an inevitable crisis brewing with housing. Governments of any persuasion will need to continue the policy of financial repression to erode UK debt. This will keep interest rates below their correct level (some free market?) for an very extended period. This will distort the housing market even more and problem exacerbated by specific gov support for housing.
If and when interest rates normalise, the pain will be severe except for those early birds who benefit from asset inflation.
rebel12Free Member. Yes, I can. You know full well you’re screwing over some young couple who’ve stretched to pay a price way more than you paid. That’s a conscious decision to enrich yourself at someone else’s expense
I agree 100% with you, I think its morally wrong, however were I in the same situation then I’d probably need all the money I could lay my hands on for my place to buy the next over inflated place further up the ladder.
tonyg2003Full MemberThe pensions thing is crazy (puts down his Lamborghini catalogue to reply) but I agree that there have been a lot of people staying put in the SE for the last five years who now think know that they can get more money from their houses and so are looking to move. Of course unless you move outside the SE your next move costs you even more.
D0NKFull MemberTBH I wish I’d gone for a massive (at the time) mortgage as soon as I left college in 99
when I got my place it was a joint mortgage with my gf, we split a few years later I could still afford the payments on my own but the bank nearly didn’t let me take it on, had to get a parent to be a guarantor. If we’d been a bit more ambitious I’d have been homeless after the split and reckon I’d have struggled to buy anywhere even half decent on my own.
Feel like maybe I’ve lost out a bit not moving up when my wages went up but I definitely made the right decision when stepping onto the market and the experience (and horror stories of potential double digit interest and negative equity) have made me cautious.
twinw4llFree MemberWhen we were looking to buy our first home in 1985 we viewed a three bed semi £17500, we went to the building society and they wouldn’t lend us the money, they said we needed to look for a more expensive house. That house however fell through and we found something else for £25000, our joint income was £12000. A mid terrace in those days was about £11000.
The average wage in 85 was £9000.mrmonkfingerFree Member^ 3.5x main income or thereabouts, I guess.
If only that’d been stuck to.
brassneckFull MemberMy kids buying houses might co-incide with my parents inheritance.
What inheritance 😥
Or without the self pity:
Inheritance, you say ???
BimblerFree MemberYou’re not wrong, houses in our street have risen by nearly £80k/25% in a year.
binnersFull MemberAnother factor in all this rank stupidity is that the mortgage market is sucking any investment out of the real economy. All those billions that were pumped into the economy were meant to be to aid the development of real business. Unfashionable things like making stuff, providing services, etc
But instead of lending to business, the banks just took the money, saw that it was miles easier to just put it into mortgage lending, and fuel a nice little housing bubble instead. Again: safe in the knowledge that when it goes tits up – as it surely will – that it won’t matter, because the same poor sods who’ll get clobbered with repossessions, negative equity etc, will be the same ones who’s taxes will be used to bail them out! Again!
That the government not only failed to put any guarantees in place to stop them doing this, but then actively encouraged them is absolutely criminal! Especially after all Gideons flannel about the ‘March of the Makers’ and re-balancing the economy. Once again the interests of the financial sector are being put at the top of the agenda, and **** everyone else!
brooessFree MemberBinners, the other silliness also means people have higher mortgage repayments or have to put more of a deposit down. That means lower consumer spending and pension saving.
So the additional tens of thousands I’m going to have to put down into a deposit because I didn’t buy a year ago is just disappearing – into no-one’s pocket anywhere. Instead of spending it on bikes, new car, home improvements, eating out, trips to the Lakes, saving it, investing it etc etc
It really is utterly moronic. Especially as even those people in silly expensive houses are no better off in any way at all, they just have an illusion that they’re richer – it’s 100% illiquid.
njee20Free MemberThat house however fell through and we found something else for £25000, our joint income was £12000. A mid terrace in those days was about £11000.
The average wage in 85 was £9000.That makes me sick!
Out of interest… what is ‘crippled’ by mortgage payments? Ours are c30% of our net income, which to me is high, but not ridiculous.
mudsharkFree MemberYes, I can. You know full well you’re screwing over some young couple who’ve stretched to pay a price way more than you paid. That’s a conscious decision to enrich yourself at someone else’s expense
Hmmm would have to be pretty altruistic to sell a house for less than what is obtainable. It’s the gazumpers and gazunderers who are the real g!ts but we’ve had them defending themselves on here before.
trail_ratFree Member25% here nick which considering rents round here for a 2 bed flat can easily be more than my mortgage – assuming you don’t want to live in Northfield or mastrick,I consider that not bad.
clubberFree MemberHmmm would have to be pretty altruistic to sell a house for less than what is obtainable. It’s the gazumpers and gazunderers who are the real g!ts
+1 on that.
Rich_sFull MemberThere was something on the beeb a few weeks ago – might have been the religious reflection bit on Evans’ show – about a new block of flats in Chelski going for planning permission.
It was accepted, and the outcry among the locals was huge with lots of questions about parking – and the church goers were also asking how they would be able to park near the church on Sunday, etc etc.
The council replied that there would be no parking issues, as they expected none of the flats would be occupied.
I find this utterly fascinating!
njee20Free Member25% here nick which considering rents round here for a 2 bed flat can easily be more than my mortgage – assuming you don’t want to live in Northfield or mastrick,I consider that not bad.
That was the thing we were gutted with, rent wasn’t all that much less (not when trying to save too) and you had absolutely nothing to show for it! Yeah ok we’re basically paying interest unless we over pay, but at least we’re getting something. Fairly sure we own a door knob or something by now!
Doh1NutFull MemberHad our house valued this morning, asked the estate agent about potential value of adding an extension. (leaving aside other motivations she may have had) the answer was not to try to improve the value to keep it “affordable” for a young couple.
Proposed value was 60% more than we paid in 2006 – West London.Happy and conflicted at the same time – obviously its just silly, but we want more space and if prices are going up, the price gap to a bigger house is only going to get worse, but proportion of your money do you want tied up in an asset that might devalue?
Not complaining – nice problem to have.rebel12Free MemberPoints for Concern:
The media has many people convinced that their house is primarily an investment, and secondly a place to live.
Planning process is slow, antiquated and unfit for purpose – too much red tape, too many NIMBY’s objecting to new housing anywhere near them.
Not enough investment in social housing.
Renting viewed as dead money and a second class option because they is no long term protection for tenants.
No restrictions on the amounts people can borrow to secure a mortgage, or the percentage deposit they have to save.
No real disincentive or prohibitive tax on second home ownership meaning that young people are being priced out of their own communities.
Out of touch politicians coming on telly to support hair brained scheme after hair brained scheme to prop up house prices (thinly veiled as a help to buy scheme for young families).
I could go on, but I’ve lost the will. It’s no wonder prices are going through the roof. Our national housing situation is dire!
njee20Free MemberRenting viewed as dead money and a second class option because they is no long term protection for tenants.
Renting is dead money… I know it’s how large chunks of the world do it, but because we don’t, the stock for renting is small, so they command a serious price (as I said, comparable to our mortgage payments, which will invariably come down when we can remortgage on a lower rate, plus the potential equity benefit) and leave you with nothing to show for it at the end, not to mention the constant risk of being shafted by a landlord.
We rented two places, both were abruptly sold from under us, luckily the second time we’d already bought somewhere, but could do without that stress. Not to mention the fact it’s never really ‘yours’ to do as you want, although that obviously has its benefits too.
Not so sure about the “second class citizen” part.
johndohFree MemberAs has been proved time and again, you can buy a house and it could be paid for in 25 years or so – so if you buy at 30, you own it at 55. Rent at 30 and you will still be paying rent until you die – which could be another 30+ years
And when you die, you have nothing left to pass on to someone else either (of course this isn’t important to everyone, but it is to many).
mudsharkFree MemberRenting is dead money
Only in the same way that paying interest on a mortgage is. It’s the fact that when you buy a property most people are heavily geared so the price increases we usually get result in significant wealth increases. When house prices do fall people can get wiped out pretty quickly.
Another approach is to invest in equities and you could end up with greater rises than an equivalent property owner – but no gearing here so safer but less of an upside.
brFree MemberAt 42 and with 10 years of savings and help from my parents and well above average salary and I can’t afford to buy in London except in undesireable areas and even then it’s something small – unless, of course, I borrow to uncomfortable levels.
I bought my first flat at 20. At the maximum of the earnings multiplier as it was then, paid £21k. Sold 6 months later for £30k. Went from there onward, upwards/sidewards. But, sometimes the mortgage cost was more than I earnt a month (went to 16% at one time, but for a long time it was +10%) – so it wasn’t always the easy world people think.
Been mortgage free for the last few years.
Renting is dead money
and so are interest payments.
EdukatorFree MemberIt’s not a housing bubble, it’s a lending bubble. As ngee20 says people are less economically stressed by their mortgages than in many other periods.
Current green belt policy in inconsistent with a predicted rise in population (though population growth is almost impossible to predict IMO)
There has been excess demand for decades in many parts of the country with prices reflecting people’s ability to borrow rather than any changes in demand which remains consistently above supply.
The lending bubble developed a leak in 2007 but the hole was taped over with monetary easing and low interest rates. The bubble is now safe until someone decides growth is strong enough to admit inflation is as high as it really is and do something about it. Something they may never do preferring to live with the ills of inflation. After all:
Inflation ills:
redistribution of wealth from poor to rich
no incentive to save
no incentive to invest (but only if interest rates are used to combat inflation)Inflation benefits:
depreciation of borrowed capital, including government debt
while interest rates and salaries remain below inflation anyone who can raise the price of their goods or services at inflation will make more profit and invest.I can’t see Cameron doing anything about inflation, money supply, lending criteria or anything else that might burst the lending bubble just yet. A market has never gone far enough until it’s gone to far.
hooliFull MemberRenting really is dead money, not only are you still paying rent well after you could have owned it, the rent will keep going up
binnersFull MemberI can’t see Cameron doing anything about inflation, money supply, lending criteria or anything else that might burst the lending bubble just yet.
But whoever ends up winning the next election will have to do something about it pretty sharpish. I reckon you can put your (ridiculously over-valued) house on Carney raising interest rates about 3 seconds after the election result is announced. Then the real fun and games is going to start.
Look out for the stories in the outraged middle market tabloids – due to appear by about May next year, I reckon – about poor Jemima and Tim, with their 2 kids, who live in a nice London suburb, with a very good school close by, but due to the increase in their mortgage payments are having stop poppy’s riding lessons, and are only weeks away from relying on food banks, who don’t even provide organic vegetables from Waitrose.
johndohFree MemberOnly in the same way that paying interest on a mortgage is. It’s the fact that when you buy a property most people are heavily geared so the price increases we usually get result in significant wealth increases. When house prices do fall people can get wiped out pretty quickly.
Another approach is to invest in equities and you could end up with greater rises than an equivalent property owner – but no gearing here so safer but less of an upside.
Yes house prices can fall, but so long as you are borrowing comfortable amounts, then you should be safe from having to sell – which is the only time you will lose money.
And if you rent instead of mortgage, how do you afford to invest in equities? Unless of course you can afford to do both, but then why don’t you just mortgage and invest?
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