I knew a guy who had the shrieking noise from the Psycho movie shower murder scene. Marriage didn't last much longer.
Anyway, chicken. Perhaps you need 'Chicken Rhythm'
I knew a guy who had the shrieking noise from the Psycho movie shower murder scene. Marriage didn't last much longer.
Nope i don't live around toffs.Kneerly Down wrote: ↑Sun Oct 02, 2022 2:17 pmHave your neighbours' property values dropped substantially since you moved in 3 years ago?
I think there's some wisdom here Funky.Potter wrote: ↑Tue Oct 04, 2022 3:01 am Stating the obvious here but I probably wouldn't rely on this builder for house price predictions, he's hardly going to talk down the value of the ones he still needs to sell.
It's not even a discussion anymore amongst investors, the consensus is that prices will drop next year around 10%, but of course there will be outliers that buck any trend depending on location and demand.
I'm skiving in a Portakabin and I have nothing in the bank. Well, less than 100k.Potter wrote: ↑Tue Oct 04, 2022 10:40 amI'll agree with that.Asian Boss wrote: ↑Tue Oct 04, 2022 10:36 amI think there's some wisdom here Funky.Potter wrote: ↑Tue Oct 04, 2022 3:01 am Stating the obvious here but I probably wouldn't rely on this builder for house price predictions, he's hardly going to talk down the value of the ones he still needs to sell.
It's not even a discussion anymore amongst investors, the consensus is that prices will drop next year around 10%, but of course there will be outliers that buck any trend depending on location and demand.
Never take financial advice from a builder, tooleygoon or rough old lag who's grafting in the sand.
Never take financial advice from anyone that hasn't already got more money than he needs in the bank - otherwise he's on the graft himself and guessing like everyone else.
I read an article (which I now can't find) from a bloke who reckons property prices have a predictable cycle. Prices rose too steeply in lockdown and will dip before picking up the predictable rise, only to drop again in two years time.
Edit: found it
I think there's a similar theory about the whole economic cycle - stock markets etc, although they usually talk about 20 years.Pirahna wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 4:39 pmEdit: found it
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/mor ... n-off.html
I haven't been following closely but are loads of private landlords exiting? I'd expect a lot of latecomers will quit if interest rates rise but, hey ho, that should push prices down and make places within reach of renters-turned-buyers.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 5:03 pm Rent is probably also being heavily effected by good old fashioned supply/demand right now? Combination of simply not enough homes (in the desired places at least) and loads of private landlords exiting?
Haven't the tax rules changed as well?Potter wrote: ↑Sun Sep 17, 2023 3:19 am I have anecdotes from people I know, but apparently the rules are changing.
A landlord used to be able to issue a no-fault eviction (or something similar, I forget the exact mechanism) and that could take months but it would usually resolve it and get someone out who was playing games, but now if that gets removed the dodgy tenant could string things along for years.
There are agencies and things like FB groups that will advise you how to screw your landlord and keep things stringing along without paying properly.
Landlords with just a few properties are selling up, big landlord companies are buying more and laughing all the way to the bank, they can afford the odd bad tenant and they have the overheads to deal with the legal dramas, especially now rents are going through the roof.