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With all due respect,
Affordable in whose eyes? You are out of step with reality if you believe this.
Meanwhile in WA, a lot of press here on the weekend that the Retail sector is officially in Recession and things haven't been this bad for many, many years.
Well you property bulls, on the weekend I watched my first auction. The property was purchased 18months ago for $750k, the house was demolished and block cleared then subdivided. About 12months ago the 3 blocks were put on the market for 395k each.
At the peak that was somewhere near the price being achieved (apples for apples) they didn't sell. Well onto the auction last weekend, 30 or so people turned up, no starting bid at $250k.
What I find interesting is that Enzo reported the clearance last weekend at 62%. Notice how he revised that figure down now to 59% to give the impression that the property is picking up. REIV would have to produce the dodgiest stats out there.
Interesting how much land in what suburb?
Glad this thread is going so strong - good for a read.
t6 awaits the housing downturn, but fears he will be waiting a long time.
Another street record price in my area.
Yup wake me up when they start moving down.
Another street record price in my area.
Yup wake me up when they start moving down.
A true collapse in house prices would indeed require some large external shock - a doubling of unemployment or interest rates - to trigger the wave of forced home sales that it would take to provoke house price falls.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/polit...ice-phobias-20110322-1c559.html#ixzz1JvHdekdJ
To cause catastrophic falls, well maybe.
The market has been propped up by foreign $$$ and our dollar and events around the world may be causing this to dry up.
I still think stagnation or up to a 20% drop is possible, however over how long of a timeframe I do not know.
I just find it very interesting that 6% in 3 months can happen when some people say property can never fall... interesting indeed.
To cause catastrophic falls, well maybe.
The market has been propped up by foreign $$$ and our dollar and events around the world may be causing this to dry up.
I still think stagnation or up to a 20% drop is possible, however over how long of a timeframe I do not know.
I just find it very interesting that 6% in 3 months can happen when some people say property can never fall... interesting indeed.
Then again, wouldn't a paltry but grinding 20% drop over 20 years ultimately be "catastrophic" for home investors?
Even stagnation or 0% increase over 20 years would be horrendous for RE capital wealth accumulation after inflation applied?
Hey were is robots, you told me i wouldn't be here in a few months time.
Still sipping latte's with a slightly increased number of for-sale signs in the area?
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