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So they weren't standard mortgage products? They sound like reverse mortgages which have much more stringent LVR restrictions than standard products.
Yeah, sorry Robots, dropped the ball on that onehello,
i knew macca350 (probably busy back at school) had posted this up earlier in the thread, OH YEAH
going down to get a slab of ruski's
thankyou
robots
Um, according to Robots prices fell a HUGE 6%.
I might add, further to Robots request for new reasons as to why property is due for a fall - perhaps a hard landing - and that is a credit crunch is unfolding right now globally. The Fed purchased $1.25 Trillion in MBS, but has now stopped. Global competition for credit will take Australian interest rates much higher in order to compete with the rest of the world.
Along with the unwinding of the low interest currency carry trade which will start to look at the relative safety of US Treasuries out of Australian instruments ie local banks funding requirements. Tis only a matter of time "brothers"?
Not me, but my father is which I may have mentioned in the past and that may be where you got that ideahello,
sorry brothers, just back from tennis
thanks Macca350, i thought you are actually a school teacher and with school starting back you may be fine tuning the year's curriculum
thankyou
robots
That was in 2008 UF - we are nearly half way through 2010 now! How time flies, and how house prices just keep on rising......Sydney and Melbourne in particular doing very well. Also no real sign of a great credit induced price bubble based on the soft ABS housing finance numbers of the past 7 months
SMH Link said:Buyers are deserting the Sydney property market at the rate of 1000 a month, causing real estate professionals to predict an ''exhausted market'' with prices plateauing for the rest of the year.
House prices to plateau as buyers flee in droves
SMH Link said:High auction clearance rates and record prices notwithstanding, official figures show the number of loans to buy houses in NSW slipped from 19,600 in September to just 14,300 in February after sliding in each of the past five months.
couple of more interesting points.....
our % of household debt....as a % of assets...is only around the 17% mark
equals equity of 83%....see graph 3
thats the affect high house prices have on that little old loan, taken out years ago
http://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap46e.pdf
That was in 2008 UF - we are nearly half way through 2010 now! How time flies, and how house prices just keep on rising......Sydney and Melbourne in particular doing very well. Also no real sign of a great credit induced price bubble based on the soft ABS housing finance numbers of the past 7 months - in fact credit growth has been quite low compared to 10/20 years ago (see this graph: http://www.businessspectator.com.au...dyhtml/0.2354!OpenElement&FieldElemFormat=jpg)
So it would appear something more fundamental is driving the market currently (pent up demand, cashed-up buyers, foreign buyers perhaps to some extent and so on).
Still rising?
http://www.smh.com.au/news/domain/a...-flee-in-droves/2010/04/13/1270924378270.html
So im concluding that its cashed up buyers cos new loans have fallen for 5 months in a row, we all know the FHB's have deserted the market and according to stock market volumes there's still alot of money not in the market, so assume some of its finding its way into housing and the assumed safety of that asset (super conservative money)
I think the fed Govt and the reserve bank are now prepared to let the real estate market fall a little, the GFC is over so nows the time to let the market go soft and keep that cash in the bank so they can totally drop the guarantee....and the Tax review out soon, perhaps negative gearing only on new housing??
''Affordability is a brake on rising rents,'' he said. ''At least one quarter of the rental market is in housing stress. The idea that rents can keep going up regardless of people's income or affordability is wrong.''
Some 'what the!' facts -
- The Big 4 Banks reduced mortgage lending by 82% in March while non-traditional lenders doubled their lending.
- 37% of March mortgage lending was for refinancing purposes
- The banks grew their loan book in residential housing by $75 billion in the last 18 months.
- The Big Four Aussie banks expanded their control over the Aussie mortgage market from 65% to 75% in the last 18 months.
Got links for those "facts"?? The first one looks very unlikely to be true to me. The others could be correct. Re refinancing, what's the normal amount of re-financing done in any given month??
Re the fall in prices, I was pointing out an error in some claims from a previous erroneous post.
What we are seeing now is a combination of the effects of reflation efforts globally and flawed government policy which distorts property prices ie negative gearing & subsidies, along with the usual RE industry hype along the lines of 'buy now or miss out'. The buying pool is fast diminishing, down to local & Chinese & Indian investors. A local petrol station was bought by a family of Indians who promptly sacked all the employees and staffed the place with family members - not many locals use them anymore.
[*]The Big Four Aussie banks expanded their control over the Aussie mortgage market from 65% to 75% in the last 18 months.[/LIST]
I find the discussion on negative gearing interesting. It would seem there is intent on either removing or making it specific to new builds. From a mkt based economic rationale this does not make sense. If you remove the deductibility of interest you must likewise remove the CGT component.
How does NG on existing properties help reduce the undersupply of homes, it does not.
How does NG on existing properties help the construction industry, they are already built.
It is an assumption that if you remove NG that the rental market will dry up unless you have specific studies that prove otherwise.
NG on existing properties only benefits the investor at the expense of the tax payer.
If NG was removed maybe housing might become more affordable and people could use the extra disposable income for investments that are productive.
Cheers
If negative gearing was made specific to new builds only, one could imagine a boom in new dwellings. However, would there be an imbalance between occupants in new and older areas?
Would new estates become filled with renters?
Totally disagree. You mess with the free mkt at your peril.
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