We're going to have a worldwide recession. Many businesses are going to go under. I can't see how house prices won't fall.What are the thoughts regarding the housing market, will prices be impacted due to the CoronaVirus?
Well, I put my parent's house on the market with some blagging estate agents a year ago, we struck a deal they had to get someone interested in it within six weeks, or I would use Purple bricks, they beought round three potential buyers three the table, after their blagg suggested suggested, I am not sure any of thee leads were properly qualified.Completely disagree, buyers and sellers need human interaction as property a very personal delicate matter , the internet can’t replicate that . I went to look at a house that was marketed by purple bricks - the communication I had with purple bricks was laughable, some young girl answered, clearly had no idea about the property, couldn’t answer any of my quite typical reasonable questions. If you pay peanuts to sell you get monkeys representing you.
As incomes drop - as they surely will if (when) we tip over into recession - then house prices should fall.
There are some other things to consider
1. virtually all asset classes are losing investors - so there's a chance that some of the money fleeing these will find it's way into the housing market;
2 if (when) government debt spirals, there could be a hike in interest rates
3. I've never once called the housing market correctly
As incomes drop - as they surely will if (when) we tip over into recession - then house prices should fall.
There are some other things to consider
1. virtually all asset classes are losing investors - so there's a chance that some of the money fleeing these will find it's way into the housing market;
2 if (when) government debt spirals, there could be a hike in interest rates
3. I've never once called the housing market correctly
I think prices may drop - sadly there will be a lot of property coming on to the market being sold by executors of the previous inhabitant, with in many cases a desire to 'get it done with' and get on with their lives and grieving rather than hanging on playing hardball with buyers.
Certainly in the short term I don't think there'll be much buying and selling going on.
I think the sombrero will invert, as people are scared of their future income, I also believe it to be the end of the high street estate agents and the internet to take 80% of the market with the Hamptons etc surviving.
Just a feeling.
, I think the market will drop a single digit percentage.
It’s starting to effect lending decisions and criteria already. I’ve got a client quite senior in the travel industry looking to remortgage, application went in last week, should have been a very straight forward application, declined today by one of the mid range building societies due to his line of work and concerns his income will go down.
At last, some good news.Right now I’d say it will stall...new builds mothballed....plans to start new sites put on hold ...as regards to individuals not many would want to make a major purchase commitment right now..and people who would have sold will hardly want strangers traipsing through their house.......after we get through the peak of this gawd knows
2. Spiralling Gov Debt would bankrupt the country if hike in Interest Rates. But can’t print money forever. Taxing the rich will not happen and it will be hard to tax regenerating businesses. Resulting in hyperinflation, poverty and stagnation.
Far more likely that the upcoming recession will be deflationary rather than inflationary in character.
Far more likely that the upcoming recession will be deflationary rather than inflationary in character.
Wow with phases like that you must be a right clever geezer.
I said hyperinflation not mere inflation. The world is now just printing off infinite banknotes so to speak. Seen in the 1920’s in the Weimar Republic and more recently in Venezuela.
https://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Hyperinflation.html
Brown, Osborne and most other central banks printed (QE) £/€/$ trillions from 2008 onwards, not resulting in inflation.
A question, in good faith - why will this event give rise to hyperinflation?
Far more likely that the upcoming recession will be deflationary rather than inflationary in character.
I said hyperinflation not mere inflation. The world is now just printing off infinite banknotes so to speak. Seen in the 1920’s in the Weimar Republic and more recently in Venezuela.
https://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Hyperinflation.html
Brown, Osborne and most other central banks printed (QE) £/€/$ trillions from 2008 onwards, not resulting in inflation.
A question, in good faith - why will this event give rise to hyperinflation?
The QE of those years hasn’t been repaid.
On one side there will be a major breakdown in supply. As we are seeing already.
On the demand side there will be a massive drop. Gov prints money to counteract. It’s sucked up immediately. Gov prints money to deal with covid19. Gov debt rising. Economy stagnant when covid19 under more control. Gov pumps in more money. The cycle begins. Gov debt rises and more money is needed.
Fiscal measures will not be an option.
The link I posted describes better.
Lloyds have just the launched the cheapest 10 year mortgage deal on record……(1.66%, max LTV 60% and £1,000 fee).