Thats what I have been getting at SCM, some areas have already been hammered and if you buy well it will only cost the same as rent. Secondly buying investment property at the moment is like a smorgasbord, there are a lot of business people being hammered, furniture shops etc. These people have investment properties that they have to move, not nice but hey. Some are in great locations and are positively geared.
The problem with median prices is, it is a reflection of houses that are selling, not a reflection of houses on the market.
Don't keep yourself out of an appreciating asset if you don't have to. I remember when I was young(here we go) houses were around $25-30k, I don't think they will go back to that and I'm 56. Trust me in 10 years they WILL be dearer than they are now.
An old bloke once told me, God's not making any more land or coastline or river front.
Catching a falling knife?
Catching a falling knife?
Thats what I have been getting at SCM, some areas have already been hammered and if you buy well it will only cost the same as rent. Secondly buying investment property at the moment is like a smorgasbord, there are a lot of business people being hammered, furniture shops etc. These people have investment properties that they have to move, not nice but hey. Some are in great locations and are positively geared.
The problem with median prices is, it is a reflection of houses that are selling, not a reflection of houses on the market.
Don't keep yourself out of an appreciating asset if you don't have to. I remember when I was young(here we go) houses were around $25-30k, I don't think they will go back to that and I'm 56. Trust me in 10 years they WILL be dearer than they are now.
An old bloke once told me, God's not making any more land or coastline or river front.
We long term property investors have heard it all several times before, I hope you do well in the future.
I know they will fall again and recover and fall again but does that mean you do nothing?
if you need some clues why house prices have not dropped, in Vic and NSW , it is because they changed political parties, and confidence was returned...
People do not buy or not buy houses because a certain party is in their state parliament, it has a lot more to do with affordability and the perception of future capital gains or losses...
Sorry, it's nothing to do with Liberal or Labor.
The only fundamental is credit.
IMO everyone will still be talking about the property bubble popping when it is all over.LOL
That's it isn't it - once everyone is dooming and glooming, that's when I will buy
the cab drivers and the hairdressers are already dooming and glooming
Actually they have dropped in line with the other capitals.
Sydney had the smallest fall because of the stamp duty exemption for FHBs until this year. You can see the finance spiked around Q4 of 2011 and has dropped back down this year - although I do not have that graph handy.
People do not buy or not buy houses because a certain party is in their state parliament, it has a lot more to do with affordability and the perception of future capital gains or losses...
What skews the figures is the lower end of the market is holding up i.e suburbs where prices are below $500k.
I don't think the figures are skewed - the average is the average, RP Data also compares like for like houses, so it is quite accurate.
Furthermore, you must understand that the price drops in a waterfall sort of way. Top tiers drop first, then middle tier, then bottom tier. Every tier must drop because the one above it now costs the same as it, and thus there would then be no reason to buy it - so it must drop.
So of course, with any housing crash (or downturn), it is the top tier - the most expensive properties which are the first to record significant drops. And then the drops trickle down to the lower tiers.
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