All Topics / General Property / Property bloodbath?

Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Profile photo of tmctmc
    Member
    @tmc
    Join Date: 2012
    Post Count: 5
    Profile photo of Jamie MooreJamie Moore
    Participant
    @jamie-m
    Join Date: 2010
    Post Count: 5,069

    Depends on who you ask.

    Whether right or wrong – this sort of headline grabbing stuff comes out on a daily basis. 

    Must admit though, I've never seen it referred to a "bloodbath"

    Nothing new here.

    Cheers

    Jamie

    Jamie Moore | Pass Go Home Loans Pty Ltd
    http://www.passgo.com.au
    Email Me | Phone Me

    Mortgage Broker assisting clients Australia wide Email: [email protected]

    Profile photo of Nigel KibelNigel Kibel
    Participant
    @nigel-kibel
    Join Date: 2005
    Post Count: 1,425

    What crap

    First the article is 12 months old. In that time no massive falls. What a lot of these so called experts forget is that the Australian property market is mainly driven by owner occupiers not investors. In other words you have people living in a 1 million dollar suburb who buy and sell in the same suburb or the one next to it so they are not buying a property from 0 to one million they may be selling a house for $900,000 and buying one for 1 million.

    The second point is that although in some states we saw values fall by 40% in most cases because of sub prime lending the markets were artificially stimulated that led to massive gains, in many cases far more than the properties were really worth and the price falls were also an over reaction.

    In States like Texas where in most cases state laws required property purchases to have a 20% deposit the results were quite different and we saw very few falls in the property market occur there. So I cannot see anything that would cause such falls in Australia.

    Nigel Kibel | Property Know How
    http://propertyknowhow.com.au
    Email Me | Phone Me

    We have just launched a new website join our membership today

    Profile photo of gmh454gmh454
    Member
    @gmh454
    Join Date: 2003
    Post Count: 537

    Very simplistic sensationalist view. Property is flat and will stay so for a while. Although continual building and renovation is improving the average of the  stock, real movement if any, in recent years has been minimal. Factor inflation into the mix and it may have gone backwards in many areas.

    The term bloodbath could apply to certain areas like the Gold Coast, but overall the market is flat and with employment still getting worse will continue to do so, until the economy improves.

    Profile photo of simplesimple
    Participant
    @simple
    Join Date: 2006
    Post Count: 237
    gmh454 wrote:
    Very simplistic sensationalist view. Property is flat and will stay so for a while. Although continual building and renovation is improving the average of the  stock, real movement if any, in recent years has been minimal. Factor inflation into the mix and it may have gone backwards in many areas.

    The term bloodbath could apply to certain areas like the Gold Coast, but overall the market is flat and with employment still getting worse will continue to do so, until the economy improves.

    Jordan Wirsz is not that neutral in his review. Been biased towards driving investment from AU to USA market where he is positioned. You can see direct interest in scaring AU investors.

    But, beside this I agree with gmh454. Was watching market since 2001, since my involvement. From 2008/2009, inflation corrected we are moving backwards. Not much, but good 2-3% year. I now make offer 10% below listed and it's a accepted norm. Use to have to offer asking or above to get vendor to sign the contract, back in 2006.

Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic. If you don't have an account, you can register here.