Realist said:I predict that you are totally, utterly, and completely wrong.
There's no way a $500,000 apartment in Sydney will be worth $8M in 26 years.
No way in hell.
Bronte said:These are the suburbs we concentrated on.....thanks to Jans book
South Perth
Victoria Park
Scarborough
Mount Lawley
Innaloo
Inglewood
East Vic Park
Leederville
Dianella
nizar said:Wayne; what were average wages 26 years ago? relative to house prices?
Have not really started looking at the trends yet but I would have thought that the post WW2 period pretty well picks the point where the "working class" really started to join in home and land ownership so in essence to compare prices before this time might be an even greater folly. I think we have not had a period in history before when so great a portion of the population where able to accumulate "wealth"wayneL said:The growth in housing above inflation has been an anomoly, a statistical abberation of the post ww2 period. Over the long term there have been enourmous lengths of time where housing stagnated and/or moved down.
Most housing trend charts are conveniently truncated at the post ww2 beginning of the baby boom giving an inaccurate picture of the long term trend.
NettAssets said:....I'll have to go for a google and see if the private ownership in the 17 and 1800's was more than I think.
regards
John
Pretty dry although not as bad as up your way. Drove up a couple of weeks ago for a funeral and there is a lot of pain between here and there.wayneL said:John,
Hows the coutryside looking out your way?
Cheers
Markets generally revert to the mean eventually. The question is how we get there? Wages up 100% or house prices down?wayneL said:I don't know nizar.
But I do know the average yearly wage to average house price ratio is about 3.5 times.
We are at about 6-10 times now, depending on the area
10% is optimistic but I hope you are right.robots said:hello,
if you call the current trend in property stagnate, then I would have it any day
quality property is solid across AUS
look out for 10% interest rates though, hold on
thankyou
robots
Units have compounded at a rate several percent under houses. Your example reflect a CG rate of 11.25% so perhaps you might check your maths.Realist said:I predict that you are totally, utterly, and completely wrong.
There's no way a $500,000 apartment in Sydney will be worth $8M in 26 years.
No way in hell.
Hi Wayne,wayneL said:If we are to analyse holistically then we then must consider factors such as peak oil, environmental concerns, climate change. The American/Australian style of sprawing city is absulutely unsustainable and this will become apparent in an uncomfortably short time frame.
The farmers in my area having the worst season in living memory... climate change? Will Australia even be able to feed itself under the twin burden of expensive energy and changing agricultural conditions?
The growth in housing above inflation has been an anomoly, a statistical abberation of the post ww2 period. Over the long term there have been enourmous lengths of time where housing stagnated and/or moved down.
Most housing trend charts are conveniently truncated at the post ww2 beginning of the baby boom giving an inaccurate picture of the long term trend.
Further rises in R/E above inflation are not economically sustainable. It's been a fantastic game, but the game is over.
Ok my memory. http://www.somersoft.com/forums/showthread.php?t=24714wayneL said:I have a problem with the hypothesis that housing increases at 2% greater than inflation.
Lets take the starting point of a house at 3.5 x earnings.
After 20 years houses will be 5 x earnings
After 50 years houses will be 8.7 x earnings
After 100 years houses will be 23 x earnings
After 150 years houses will be 60 x earnings
After 200 years houses will be 160 x earnings
After 300 years houses will be 1,118 x earnings
Clearly this is ridiculous, and this observation, even if apperantly axiomatic during our lifetime thus far, must be punctuated by a calamatous breakdowns in said axiom. In other words the axiom is problematical.
We do see this from time to time and is evident in such markets as Japan, Hong Kong, Argentina, and the west during the great depression/WW2.
Prices will trend ever upwards so long as we have fiat currency and governments willing to debase them for short term political ends. ( and so will the measurement of inflation be understated) However, there will be oscillations in this trend around the concept of "value".
Overvaluation will elicit corrections, undervaluations will incite reactions. So it is in any market. We here on this board observe the truth of that every day.
Many believe a correction is imminent.
WaySolid said:Ok my memory. http://www.somersoft.com/forums/showthread.php?t=24714
It turns out that it's a lot less than 1-2% over inflation (which I quoted from memory), and the excess performance is indeed in modern times (post ww2).
What you said makes sense to me.
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