America sneezes and we catch a cold.
that old saying applies to the stock market, which are quite closely coupled (for one think alot of shares trade on both sides). it has bugger all to do with housing markets which are entriley seperate. you'd be better off finding trends to link Ireland or northen France, Belgium, Holland.
Don't tell me, let me guess. You're an Estate Agent and you come bearing glad tidings of good news concerning the housing market.
OK, so the credit crunch didn't start in the US and spread to the UK?
because UK banks were lending into the US housing market and the wider economies are linked, so there was an effect once the US tanked. above you are insinuating that when US house prices fall there is likly to be a direct relation to UK house prices. this is not true.
Dont let me stop you. There must still be a few mugs buying.
Hows the commission going?
I think that sound was you just shooting yourself in the foot.
I am indeed insinuating that when US house prices fall there is likely to be a direct relation to UK house prices.
Another wave of bad debt for US banks and it all starts again.
nice try but no. there is very little cross border lending right now (the credit crunch...) The lending (extent of debt) is still that which occured prior to the Credit Crunch. Or have all banks now revealed the entire extent of their debts, settled up, and moved on? and the value of property in the US has zero bearing on the value of property in the UK. *if* a recession occurs in the US *and* that is mirrored in the UK, there *might* be an indirect knock on effect. QED But the same could be said for the price of Coffee beans in South America. and you think I stretch a point!
Not mugs London will always have
A good Market.