Jump to content
House Price Crash Forum

Could U.k. House Prices Fall Again By Another 20%?


tio

Recommended Posts

0
HOLA441
  • Replies 94
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

1
HOLA442
2
HOLA443
3
HOLA444
4
HOLA445
5
HOLA446

Again?

They are up on 2007/08 round my way.

...there will always be the 'special areas' the 'special houses', areas where people can afford to sit tight and still ask a large sum of money that would be worth moving for......always will be the money flushed buyers where money is no object who fall 'hook line and sinker'..... but becoming fewer and farther between. ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6
HOLA447
7
HOLA448
8
HOLA449
9
HOLA4410

More like 30-40%.

Property will fall further, property falls with availability of funds, rising interest rates, high commodity costs and basic cost of living, low pay rises, higher unemployment and the ability of people to keep up with their rent payments.....all of that means rising house prices does not have much going for it, they will fall back down what the people can pay.....can't pay won't pay...simples. ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10
HOLA4411

How odd. I'm in Hants and prices are well down from the peak.

Whenever people make these kind of statements either way they should provide data.

http://imgur.com/4KZgM

That's for all of Hampshire 1995 to Feb 2012. Slight dip in 2009 but then back up again to insane levels.

Tried uploading these files as jpg / gif / png all failed. Is there any image hosting site HPC forum trusts that we can use to dump graphs to?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11
HOLA4412

Whenever people make these kind of statements either way they should provide data.

http://imgur.com/4KZgM

That's for all of Hampshire 1995 to Feb 2012. Slight dip in 2009 but then back up again to insane levels.

Tried uploading these files as jpg / gif / png all failed. Is there any image hosting site HPC forum trusts that we can use to dump graphs to?

I prefer to judge local prices on what they're actually doing, rather than looking at a graph!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12
HOLA4413

I prefer to judge local prices on what they're actually doing, rather than looking at a graph!

But this is sales from the land registry. Admittedly some repos and other anomalies might not be captured but it's close, no?

Local prices don't confirm sales prices so something like rightmove is not as accurate.

Don't you like data Bruce?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13
HOLA4414
14
HOLA4415

Not when the data is manipulated in an attempt to convince me that what I'm seeing with my own eyes is not true!

Do you really not believe the land registry? I'm not trusting of much of what we see in the media but why is the land registry not giving a clear picture? For example in West Hull it shows a 30% drop since 2008.

Genuine question!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15
HOLA4416

Do you really not believe the land registry? I'm not trusting of much of what we see in the media but why is the land registry not giving a clear picture? For example in West Hull it shows a 30% drop since 2008.

Genuine question!

I believe the Land Registry for specific sales but not their general figures which do not, as you said, include repossessions and other transactions that they class as unrepresentative. I wonder what the real drop is for West Hull if you include the transactions they exclude.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16
HOLA4417

I believe the Land Registry for specific sales but not their general figures which do not, as you said, include repossessions and other transactions that they class as unrepresentative. I wonder what the real drop is for West Hull if you include the transactions they exclude.

Ok I can see that but repos would be more likely in a falling market. So if an area has fallen by 30% you can no doubt extrapolate further "hidden" falls. Such an extrapolation would have to be smaller in a market that has risen slightly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17
HOLA4418

Ok I can see that but repos would be more likely in a falling market. So if an area has fallen by 30% you can no doubt extrapolate further "hidden" falls. Such an extrapolation would have to be smaller in a market that has risen slightly.

If the Land Registry figures included all sales, as they should, there would be no need for extrapolation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18
HOLA4419

If the Land Registry figures included all sales, as they should, there would be no need for extrapolation.

..is property sold by auction shown on the land registry?....house down the road sold for 30% less than the house next door did six months previously, it had a bigger garden as well, brought down the whole average value of the street that did. :blink:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19
HOLA4420

If the Land Registry figures included all sales, as they should, there would be no need for extrapolation.

Agree. Data transparency in the UK is poor. However surely if there were a massive detachment between auction prices and selling prices arbitrageurs would move in and close the gap. Yes credit is restricted but not to those already in "pwopertie". So what's the gap in percentage points in your opinion?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20
HOLA4421

Agree. Data transparency in the UK is poor. However surely if there were a massive detachment between auction prices and selling prices arbitrageurs would move in and close the gap. Yes credit is restricted but not to those already in "pwopertie". So what's the gap in percentage points in your opinion?

Well, I see prices down 20% in my area and people provide graphs to show they've gone up 5%, so I could hazard a guess at 25%. You don't need to exclude many low value repossessions in a low volume market to distort the figures massively.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21
HOLA4422
22
HOLA4423

Well, I see prices down 20% in my area and people provide graphs to show they've gone up 5%, so I could hazard a guess at 25%. You don't need to exclude many low value repossessions in a low volume market to distort the figures massively.

True - low volume makes avg price less indicative either up or down.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23
HOLA4424
24
HOLA4425

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information