couple of points....gfresh, I thought the Qld market was still overheated...so what price ranges are your friends buying at...and they are spending two incomes, with no savings ???
gfresh...newish cars etc hmmmm
...on ACA ch 7 last night..a woman...a thrift planner or something went down a whole street somewhere...sat down with the mums and dads and taught them how to reduce wastage in their budgets...most threw away the credit card to begin with...almost all were saving on average about 15,000 pa...or roughly 300 pw, cut out the takeaways etc, planning meals, planning expenses...some people had never budgeted before ?????
Thrift is the enemy of the RE bull. Without the unrestrained spending/credit people have gotten used to, the economy contracts and then....we have the situation we are in - having to artificially prop up the RE market in the misplaced view that it will kickstart the economy ie push economics.
All we have now is a government pushing a group of people into home ownership at the very time any one of the margins could be compromised to their detriment - a very tenuous situation for all?
Perhaps you could apply these negative labels to a small minority of home owners and highly leveraged investors, but I think it is incorrect to tar the majority of mortgage holders and home owners with that brush.
If highly leveraged investors are in the minority, how come household debt in Australia is at an all time high?
If highly leveraged investors are in the minority, how come household debt in Australia is at an all time high?
Say it's not so Junior.
So QED I do not think your contention that "thrift is the enemy of the R/E bull" is correct at all. Quite the opposite in fact.
PS: How exactly is the R/E market being artificially propped up in reality?
...Home lenders lodged claims for $210 million worth of bad loans in the 12 months to December compared with only $49 million in 2005, according to the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority....
....MICHAEL TROY: The defaults are occurring despite the lowest interest rates in three years and analysts fear the problem will spread further and quicker if unemployment goes up....
More people are losing their home as a result of defaulting on their mortgage, according to a new Datamonitor survey, which also found that people are taking advantage of recent interest rate cuts to pay off more of their mortgage than they are required to each month...
“If prices drop, we’ve got a problem. If interest rates go up we have a problem. If unemployment goes up we have a problem”, Marcus North from Fujitsu Consulting told the 7.30 Report. “If all those three things come together that’s a perfect storm and we have a crisis.”
Should unemployment and interest rates both rise, as occurred in the 1974 economic crisis, North argued that Australia had “all the ingredients” for a subprime mortgage crisis similar to the US. “We are going to see defaults rising. We are going to see people having negative equity and they will struggle to pay the mortgage that they have”, he said.
hello,
great opinions from those people just like yours and mine, fantastic
thankyou
associate professor robots
Seems I am not explaining it too well. In a vibrant spending economy, like the one we just had, the wealth effect was just that - the rising common wealth lifted all asset prices?, but now we have the opposite. Generally, and I am not targeting responsible RE owners at all, people being thrifty & not spending depletes the velocity of money in society, and does have an effect on property. I just wonder how RE would fare without all the hand holding from the government?uncle...you did say...'thrift is the enemy of the RE bull'....afraid I dont see it that way at all...we can all look at the same thing...but see it differently
festivus....
handholding by the govt ???
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