Bill M
Self Funded Retiree
- Joined
- 4 January 2008
- Posts
- 2,132
- Reactions
- 740
Money Morning is fee you should join up and get with the programme.
Do you have an answer as why every other time property prices have fallen by a few percent over a year or two that they haven't subsequently crashed? Or is it "different this time"?
You guys just take in all this bearish outlook stuff without any real thought or analysis don't you? Two problems:
1) The data on that chart looks suspect to me, and I notice it doesn't cite a source? From the ABS here: http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/6416.0Dec 2011?OpenDocument you can see that the national house price index has fallen from it's last peak of 149.8 in the June 1/4 2010 to 141.6 in the Dec 1/4 of 2011 - so 18 months, the period implied on Keen's chart. By my reckoning, that's a fall of 5.5% -whereas Keen's chart implies Oz is 9% down after 18 months, which is factually wrong based on ABS data.
2) All this chart is really saying is that every time property prices have fallen 5% in 12 months, that "this is what the start of a crash" looks like.
We have nothing like Japans demographic problems
Research read up on depression you will find we have one about every 75 yrs and find out what caused them.
A very large proportion of the population calling "baby boomers" who own over 50% of all property have started moving into retirement. Pretty sure we do.
Research read up on depression you will find we have one about every 75 yrs and find out what caused them.
1930 tanking was cause by feds tampering and housing and in a day when you had to put down 20+ % deposit not -10%.
I know some Baby Boomers and older who have moved into retirement and they tend to keep holding onto the properties. I think it may take death to prise them from their hands. I don't think they will come onto the market as much as we all would hope. They may also sell to their children as investments so they stay off the market for another generation.
Few things;
First of all, baby boomers hold a disproportionately large amount of investment properties. Even if they choose not to sell their main property (where they live), they will have to sell these to fund their retirement - there is simply no choice.
Additionally, for those whom do not hold IPs or otherwise, it is quite sensible to downsize their property and perhaps move to a quieter location.
They do have a choice, collect the rents. maybe they will sell one but many own a few.
The baby boomers that tend to downsize are the poorer ones, not the investors. There are many elderly widows living in big mansions with many empty rooms.
Finally, I didn't say all would sell to their children, but some will, especially the wealthy ones with kids who went to private school and also have good jobs.
I'm not saying your wrong, just that it will probably not be as ideal as you hope.
Why collect the rents on a property through a property crash when you can sell now and lock in better term deposit rates? These are important matters, if you're a person too old to work, but will probably live for a few more decades, then would you really be able to take such a big risk, would you really be able to sleep through the stress? Seems much better to me just to sell.
Their experience with property has been good, they will sleep well.
Also it is a hedge against inflation, something term deposits are not.
Why collect the rents on a property through a property crash when you can sell now and lock in better term deposit rates?
Because if you own a debt free property, why do you care, unless you think rents will crash, what the property is worth?
Why try and second guess the market and lock yourself into a term deposit which might get eaten away at inflation when you have a inflation protected income stream that will fund your retirement.
So what you are saying is, holding an asset, why do you care if that asset will drop in price...
Like...I don't know, maybe I guess because people don't like losing money? Like you know, it's seen as not such a good thing to happen because more money is always better - right?
Rent is not an inflation protected income stream either, in housing downturns rent goes down just as well as prices.
Isn't that a bit like saying we have a bad earthquake every 75 years, it's 75 years since we had one, so we're due to have one now.:
I know some Baby Boomers and older who have moved into retirement and they tend to keep holding onto the properties. I think it may take death to prise them from their hands. I don't think they will come onto the market as much as we all would hope. They may also sell to their children as investments so they stay off the market for another generation.
I am talking perfectly located inner city property by the way.
The Depression was caused by a complex array of factors.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?