Showing posts with label ireland housing crash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ireland housing crash. Show all posts

April 14, 2008

This lady in Dublin believed the realtors, believed the media, and believed in the "housing ladder". And she's lost $100,000 already, and counting


So many lied in order to earn a commission.

So many believed, for so many reasons.

The commissions - they got pocketed, with the realtors and mortgage brokers making out like bandits.

The buyers? Well, quite frankly, they got f*cked.


Should have listened to HP.

Housing Woes in U.S. Spread Around Globe

DUBLIN — The collapse of the housing bubble in the United States is mutating into a global phenomenon, with real estate prices swooning from the Irish countryside and the Spanish coast to Baltic seaports and even parts of northern India.

In Ireland, Spain, Britain and elsewhere, housing markets that soared over the last decade are falling back to earth. Property analysts predict that some countries, like this one, will face an even more wrenching adjustment than that of the United States, including the possibility that the downturn could become a wholesale collapse.

June 12, 2007

FLASH: ABN Bank sees housing crash on a global scale, reports UK 50% overvalued, USA 25% overvalued

Oh dear god, this is going to end nasty.


You'll never see this type of leverage, this type of credit stupidity and this type of insane worldwide asset overvaluation again in your lifetime.

The biggest bubble in recorded human history. Followed, of course, by the biggest crash. You think the US is having a nice housing crash? That's just an appetizer. The main course is being prepared here in Europe, where speculation-mad, over-leveraged, housing-crazed Brits have fueled a European-wide real estate frenzy. And then the music stopped.

Get popcorn and settle in. The show is about to start.

ABN fears world housing crash - Soaring borrowing costs could spark a housing slump on a 'global scale', investment bank ABN Amro has warned.

Families have taken on 'unsustainably large' mortgages, leaving them vulnerable to the sharp increases in bond yields and official interest rates seen in recent weeks, wrote economist Dominic White.

Britain is one of the most exposed markets thanks to rampant speculation over the past decade, though it is by no means alone.

Claims that shortfalls in the supply of new homes will lead to an inexorable rise in UK property prices in coming decades have 'as much credibility as Britney Spears' latest comeback,' he wrote.

'The decline in global interest rates has now been largely reversed,' White said. 'Rising real interest rates could result in greater economic volatility. I believe this leaves housing markets vulnerable to a correction on a global scale.'

Although fears for the health of the US housing market have captured headlines, the degree of over-valuation is more 'severe' in Britain, Australia, Spain and Ireland, ABN Amro calculates.

A note by the bank in April found that UK residential property is 50% overvalued, whereas US houses are 25% too expensive.