- Joined
- 12 November 2007
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- 4
Fantastic day brothers,
Quiet in the streets, less cars driving by looking at the houses on display.
Just found out - agent has gone bankrupt - that happens often here - how can a rental only agent lose money? ;-)
Don't you live in a cul de sac, maybe it's the advent of the GPS navigation your picking up on, less people taking a wrong turn into your dead end street.
The strange cases of the good houses that just won't sell
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/t...t-wont-sell-20110917-1kfci.html#ixzz1YFwiJC00
hello,
still here MW, long weekend again for us in the building industry
how you going to kill me Medicowallet, like you keep you keep posting your the Robot killer! amazing
bad dose of pethidine the last few day
thankyou
professor robots
housing is predominately a basic need for most....
unless you prefer to live in a cave....
most people live in the same house for anywhere between 20-50+ years...
no wonder the property investors are happy to keep on investing in that market....
.....all those disgruntled renters....who are still waiting for the market to crash
all the bailouts for all those bankrupted countries....can only mean one thing....more money being printed...dollar devalued.....means more dollars for less value
or hyperinflation....
my case has 100's of years of proof.....historical figures.....
dont give me crap about Japan
you guys just dont get it!....
the housing market is not like the stock market....where stocks move around every day...actually its more like a gambling den...and boy has the stockmarket put on a great display recently.....
the big guys taking money from the babies....
housing is predominately a basic need for most....
unless you prefer to live in a cave....
the majority of people, buy a home, they may upgrade at some stage to accommodate the teenagers....but not all...
most people live in the same house for anywhere between 20-50+ years...
they dont care about the prices, or the mood...
the enjoy their lives....then hand it over to the kids on death...they love their community
they could not care less what the value is....they have no intention of moving....
some of you appear to be ...well fringe dwellers.....
on the outside looking in....
you may not see the woods for the trees....
you dont recognise a bargain or opportunity when its staring you in the face...
you have a mindset...like penny dreadful stocks...
trying to pick the tops and the bottoms
I can almost bet I will still see the same ones here in 5 years time....still whinging, betting, gambling....
life will eventually pass you by....
no wonder the property investors are happy to keep on investing in that market....
.....all those disgruntled renters....who are still waiting for the market to crash
all the bailouts for all those bankrupted countries....can only mean one thing....more money being printed...dollar devalued.....means more dollars for less value
or hyperinflation....
my case has 100's of years of proof.....historical figures.....
dont give me crap about Japan, or the US where Obama 's rule that it was racial discrimination not to lend to a no income borrower.....
but I am pretty sure you will...
I am one of those who hates moving but I am well aware that living at the same address for 30 years is about as common as having the same job for 30 years these days. Some do it, but most don't.most people live in the same house for anywhere between 20-50+ years...
they dont care about the prices, or the mood...
the enjoy their lives....then hand it over to the kids on death...they love their community
The ones who gain from house price falls are first home buyers or those upgrading. The ones who lose are last home sellers or those moving to a smaller (cheaper) property. For everyone else, it's pretty much irrelevant unless you want to mortgage the house and spend the money on something else (some will, most don't).
Personally though, I couldn't really care what my house is worth as long as it's not dropping in value relative to other similar properties. So what if it drops by $100K - there's no practical effect as long as every other similar house has dropped by the same amount.
Dowdy,
Why would hyper inflation mean you could purchase a house for an ounce of gold.
It's funny to me that the gold bugs seem to think that hyper inflation only increases the value of gold,
Hyper inflation would force up the price of all assets including property.
True, actually if anything property would be more valuable as it would be one of the few things you could own that will retain value. Especially farm land.
Shares would be damaged and metals etc. would be worth less as the economy stalled.
Gold would be worth a lot but would rely on people accepting it in exchange for food etc.
Property always remains a great hedge to inflation.
Cash depreciates in buying power so you buy less for the same amount.
Property becomes less affordable,rents rise,prices of housing increases as material and labor costs rise.
If a tank of
Gas was $60 and is now $100 the $s locked in an IP are more valuable.
Cash becomes less valuable.that cash in the bank buys less.
Shares drop as companies tighten up and profits shrink.
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