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Irish Property Market chat II - *read mod note post #1 before posting*

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  • Registered Users Posts: 544 ✭✭✭theboringfox


    What people say and what people do in privacy of the ballot box cam be two different things. I see posts on here all the time with this humble brag stuff where they are saying I bought my place for X and now the houses are selling for Y and feel so bad. People love that their houses are worth more. Its an asset. The more value the more equity. That might be equity they can release in retirement through downsizing or equity release loan or inheritance for kids. It does matter and its not an Irish thing. A proper functioning market should have low single digit annual growth. If house prices are only rising 2% it wont create a frenzy. And I do support the view that grants should be unwound including rent a room. Should be withdrawn over a number of years. Itll just remove the heat from market and might even lead to falls. Critically it will stop people rushing to buy today for fear of they dont house buying might be out of reach. That becomes a vicious cycle when sets in as everyone rushes to buy.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭PeadarCo


    The 30% reduction is the price drop required to get to 300k as your average house price assuming the average house price in the state as currently being 430k.

    The problem with a lot of your suggestions is that it will only reduce the investment into housing and reduce supply.

    Any large reduction would reduce the amount of money banks can lend for mortgages and the wider economy. Negative equity has very practical impacts. Houses are held as collateral for mortgages. If the value of this collateral reduces significantly the value of the mortgage drops and the amount of capital banks have to hold goes up to counter this drop(thank the ECB) in asset value. Less lending to the wider economy with knock on negative impacts for the economy. Look at 2008 for what happens when your banking system seized up . Now thanks to Irish Central bank and wider ECB reforms it's unlikely we will see such a dramatic repeat, but a large drop in house prices will impact the wider economy due to reduced lending capacity from Irish banks. The fact we have so few banks only makes the situation worse.

    Clamping down on REITs is just reducing investment in Irish property which means less money put into building and therefore less supply making the situation worse. It also means more government money being spent on housing instead of health, education etc. As already mentioned there are limits to how much Irish banks can lend when it comes to housing due to the lessons from the last crash. Building houses requires money, making it harder to invest money in Irish property doesn't help things. The advantage REITs have is that they can effectively prepay developer's for housing which makes cashflow a lot easier and the projects dramatically less risky. As China has shown you can take this approach too far but no one is suggesting we are remotely near that situation yet.

    It's grand bringing back people from overseas and improving the amount of people working in the construction industry will help but that's a long term thing and is unlikely to result in any dramatic reduction in house prices especially once you factor in inflation. It will take years to see the impact from these measures.

    Getting rid of the FTP grant may help things but again the rise in house prices predate this grant. Removing it is unlikely to collapse house prices.

    If you want a huge drop in nominal house prices especially in a period of relatively high inflation you need to do something relatively dramatic that has a high chance of tanking the economy.

    On the positive side currently house prices are below the current level of inflation. So in real terms house prices are actually going down or at the very least stabilising.



  • Registered Users Posts: 317 ✭✭chalky_ie


    Owning 2 homes(one seemingly mortgage free) and your own business at a young age puts you in a pretty privileged position to be able to say something like that. Might get your hands on a few more homes with a 30% drop too!



  • Registered Users Posts: 18,478 ✭✭✭✭Bass Reeves


    People keeping harping about government and banking interference. However the government has targeted its ''interference '' to support FTB, which was you.

    However some choose to ignore the facts and choose to believe a ''Chicken Licken'' scenario where house prices would collapse.

    The only way house prices falls is if demand falls. This is the fallacy that the economy will collapse but will not effect me and I can then buy a bigger house than I could have before the crash.

    The economic crash of 2008-14 created a subset that taught housing would always remain cheap and they would have choices not available to previous or present generations.

    Basically you nobody or no entity shafted you. You were just greedy and made decisions and you are greedy now looking for a crash that will effect and ruin others and probably your own life.

    My children are an age where they are looking at building/buying a house. My eldest is intending to start digging foundations in the next few weeks. Do I wish building costs and building materials were cheaper. Yes I do but I am also realistic enough to know that its pointless wishing you just get on with it. Do Imind if house prices fall, I do not, but I just cannot see it happening.

    Slava Ukrainii



  • Registered Users Posts: 317 ✭✭chalky_ie


    That poster seems to be banned, but the whole 'I want the world to fall apart so I can get my house/have others that have one feel my pain' is the shittiest opinion to have. Actively hoping for other people's lives to be negatively impacted, just so you can get something is just pure crap.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,018 ✭✭✭shoegirl


    All of these problems are historical and due to self certification that was introduced in the 90s. The same issues largely went from the Irish market around the depth of the bust.

    Donegal was an outlier because partisanship at council level around 2010-2012 paralysed the council, they couldn't pass a budget for about 2 years, and at one point had it teetering on the verge of bankruptcy - with the council issuing protective noticed to its employees at one stage - the mica scandal largely originates from this period of deep instability, and its odd that no commentator calls that out.



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,018 ✭✭✭shoegirl


    The phasing out period of the Amateur Landlord boom has resulted in a lot of poorly to zero maintained homes going on the market - some of them are really awful and shocking when you look back on google maps and can see people were actually living in them. The pre 63 sales that appear on b2b sites are the most horrific of them all.



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,033 ✭✭✭timmyntc


    This is false - most of the mica builds (actually pyrrhotite) were built in the tiger years, not post 08.

    It was due to some members of the ICF deciding to cut cement content of blocks to make more profit, as the blocks still met regs on the day they were produced.

    This is why it appeared in several places, like Mayo, Limerick, Clare and Wexford.

    All down to poor regs and poor enforcement



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,600 ✭✭✭Villa05


    I don't know where people are getting these pensions that are tied up in property, I have 2 pensions and the exposure to property is minimal in all options

    For the vast majority of Irish people pension building should avoid property as your heavily levarged in property already through the mortgage on your home

    What I'm proposing is a bond to sell to pension funds to fund construction of homes, state backed and inflation linked which may be useful to them when there customers want to reduce risk at or close to retirement



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,450 ✭✭✭fliball123


    There is a very high % of investment in Irish property from pension funds you should asking your fund manager why they are not doing this as you would of made a killing over the last decade



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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,204 ✭✭✭combat14


    Us financial adviser says:

    “‘Whatever you do, never buy a house with a monthly payment that’s more than 25% of your monthly take-home pay on a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage (which has the overall lowest total cost).”

    does this mean most irish homes are widely over valued?



    .



  • Registered Users Posts: 5,128 ✭✭✭Padre_Pio


    "The median home sale price was identified as $431,000 as of 2023, according to the video. With the average interest rate on a 15-year mortgage at 6.47%, the post detailed that a 20% down payment, amounting to $86,200, would be required. This initial payment leads to a monthly mortgage expense of approximately $2,998."

    Using that example and interst rate, you'd pay about 163k in interest.

    Using an Irish interest rate of 3.5% and 30 years, you pay 153k in interest.

    Dave Ramsey is very outspoken on a lot of topics, and generally advice in the US does not translate well to Ireland.



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,985 ✭✭✭Blut2


    "Clamping down on REITs is just reducing investment in Irish property which means less money put into building and therefore less supply making the situation worse. It also means more government money being spent on housing instead of health, education etc"

    This isn't a remotely valid argument in Ireland in 2024, though, and undermines your entire post.

    As I said in the post you're replying to, we're currently at completely full capacity in the construction industry. And, at the same time, the Irish state has billions of unspent euros every year (€1.52bn in the department of housing alone) currently. Its absolutely false to suggest there would be a need to reduce spending in other areas.

    Any drop in investment in construction from the private sector in the near future will result in the spare capacity being instantly snapped up and put to use by the Irish state itself. There will be no drop in overall housing output.

    As for the rest - as discussed previously, even a substantial drop in prices would result in very few households in the country actually being in negative equity, circa 5% for something approaching a 30% drop. The idea this would result in a widescale banking/economic collapse is nonsense.

    Getting rid of the demand side grants etc won't make a huge difference by themselves, no, but its all cumulative. If every one of these measures reduces prices by a few percent then they all add up.

    The overriding point is that there are measures the Irish state could take if it actually wanted to reduce house prices, tomorrow. And that most of the country, including a majority of home owners, would support. But our current government is making the conscious decision not to, because reducing house prices has never been a policy they've supported.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,600 ✭✭✭Villa05


    I don't want my pension in property as I'm heavily invested already through home/mortgage ownership. Plenty of other investment options out there

    Irish Reits haven't been great, CRE is a mess. I'm sure there were other ways to gain on property in the last decade



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭PeadarCo


    Irish construction industry is at full capacity grand but who will pay for the capacity of the sector to expand? Remember staff costs will over time go up in line inflation, meaning less work done for the same money over time. Or should everyone in the construction industry not ask for pay rises or worse take pay cuts? That's where REITs and other outside investors come in. You can't employ more people in construction without more money. Irish banks have limits to how much exposure they can have to the constitution/housing market. Any serious reduction in property values would only reduce the money banks have for mortgages.

    Grand the Irish state takes up the tab but that means less money being spent on stuff like, schools, health, public transport etc. IE the infrastructure required to support more houses in the first place. You seem to not understand the concept of opportunity cost. To make things simple money spend on housing cannot be spent on other areas. You are assuming the Irish government has infinite money which unfortunately it doesn't. It does though have near limitless things it can spend money on.

    You have completed ignored that regardless of what level of negative equity people are happy with, reduced house prices directly impacts banks ability to lend which impacts the wider economy. Negative equity concerns has very real impact on bank lending. It's not something only those who are looking to sell need to worry about as 2008 showed.

    It's very easy to say there loads of ways the Irish government could reduce house prices but when you start digging into the detail you haven't mentioned any.

    You also have to remember that we are currently in a period of relatively high inflation. Currently house prices rises are lagging behind this rate. So in real terms house prices are already getting cheaper.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,600 ✭✭✭Villa05


    Construction industry federation have said they are capable of 60k output per anum, this would suggest we are nowhere near capacity



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,985 ✭✭✭Blut2


    "Grand the Irish state takes up the tab but that means less money being spent on stuff like, schools, health, public transport etc."

    No, in reality it very much doesn't. The Department of Housing has €1.52bn sitting in its accounts of unspent money as of right now, that it literally can't spend because the construction industry in Ireland is already at capacity. The Irish state has put €7bn+ over the last two years into the national investment fund, because its also unable to find things to spend it on currently.

    The Irish state could spend billions of euros a year next year on capital investment in housing and not raise taxes, or cut spending in any other area, by a single cent. And it would, if it could get the workers. Thats why a drop in house prices, and a resulting drop in private sector investment if it happened, wouldn't matter a jot. Any and all excess capacity is going to get soaked up immediately.

    ? I listed off a number of measures the Irish government could use to reduce house prices less than one page ago in this thread: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/comment/121759440/#Comment_121759440

    Irish banks wouldn't stop lending for mortgages if prices dropped by 30% over a period of time. German residential prices were down 10.2% YOY in Q32023 and guess what, banks are still lending. The show goes on.



  • Registered Users Posts: 544 ✭✭✭theboringfox


    I would agree personally that 25% is where Id personally keep it but thats general position. People on higher net incomes can put higher percentage in. If one couple has 10k per month net income and mortgage 2.5k thats 25% and 7.5k left after it. If another couple has 15k net income and mortgage 5k pm thats 33% but with 10k pm left. So they are still better off than couple A despite mortgage payment being double the others.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,600 ✭✭✭Villa05




  • Registered Users Posts: 3,488 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    It does impact the banks ability to lend and not just for mortgages but all lending because if the drop in value puts people in arrears or default then this eats up the capital the banks need to be able to lend.

    This is why the banks sold off the bad loan books for a pittance as it freed up capital and although they made a big loss on selling it at a massive discount it was still cheaper in the big scheme rather than have the capital tied up or try and get additional capital from the markets (or a bigger government bail out as was the case in 08)



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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,488 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    pension exposure to property is a tiny percentage as the majority are invested in government bonds. But that tiny percentage is still very significant in the property market.

    There is circa 50 trillion in pensions globally so if just 3% was invested in property that would be 150billion invested in property globally. Obviously this globally but looking at Ireland in Isolation the pension market is circa 125 billion which at 3% would be 3.75 billion.

    As for state backed loans specifically for construction it makes little sense when the government can borrow on the open market at lower rates.

    With regards inflation linked bonds these generally underperform in the long term and are not popular with most investors and therefore cost more to issue…. Just look at TIPS v T-Notes for example.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,890 ✭✭✭enricoh


    E2000 per month rent for a 2 bed apartment in salubrious Longford! Is there anything to be said for a soft landing?!




  • Registered Users Posts: 949 ✭✭✭Ozark707


    If the gov take places like this then there will be no end to it.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,057 ✭✭✭Roberto_gas


    Looks like investors are fleeing the market. Last straw. Either some global phenomenon crashes the market or it gets worse once the interest rates start going down. There are just no houses coming for sale in some of the areas i am keeping a tap on. Most houses sold are rentals so not sure whats going on there ! People who bought 5 years back are stuck not able to upgrade to bigger houses and cant get extensions/attics done due to high costs. increased rates after fixed period is a double whammy ! Houses which are half decent are ending up 50-80K over listed price(150K in one case i know of) and there are no decent second hand properties available. New homes are way way costly and pose a great risk of being able to repay as you are going above and beyond what you can afford.

    Really interesting setup on the market and not sure how it will unfold !



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,033 ✭✭✭timmyntc


    Don't know about your investors fleeing statement, however for the rest I would agree.

    The housing shortage appears to have gotten much worse recently - possibly due to vacant refurb grants and asylum seekers rental monies increasing demand for previously less desirable properties.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,057 ✭✭✭Roberto_gas


    investors are selling is what i meant....most of the houses coming to market are either probates or investors exiting(which is fair enough as its a good return they would have made).



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,488 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    if you can’t find a house to buy your unlikely to put yours up for sale so makes perfect sense why mainly ex rentals and probate are what we see coming to the market.



  • Registered Users Posts: 615 ✭✭✭J_1980




  • Registered Users Posts: 2,204 ✭✭✭combat14


    thats because they know the government will not pay top dollar for the portfolio



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  • Registered Users Posts: 7,033 ✭✭✭timmyntc


    It's a bad time to sell

    High interest rates and cost of credit mean not many investors can raise that kind of cash

    Time to sell was before rate rises, or once they fall in a year or two.

    Only reason vision capital were pushing for this sale is because they are having liquidity issues of their own. They can't sell all their stake in IRES without share price taking a big hammering in the process, unless it was agreed IRES are sold in it's entirety to someone.



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