Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Sell property shares - housing crash imminent.     

hlyeo98 - 15 Sep 2007 19:56

With the US subprime crisis spreading to Europe, shockwaves in Northern Rock which would spread to other banks, UK economy growth not looking healthy, increasing trade deficits, sharply rising mortgage costs, falling corporate profits and job cuts especially in the City, and as market turmoils escalates, housing price which shows a first drop of 2.6% (from Rightmove last month), this are the signs of the beginning of a housing crash. PROPERTY SHARES ARE A SELL!

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=PSN&Si

Stan - 16 Sep 2007 10:23 - 13 of 352

As illustrated in most of the charts above people have been selling for months.

maddoctor - 16 Sep 2007 13:49 - 14 of 352

are you always six months late with your threads - what a waste of space

hlyeo98 - 16 Sep 2007 16:47 - 15 of 352

Well, I have been shorting some of these for the past 4 months.

hlyeo98 - 17 Sep 2007 13:47 - 16 of 352

More shorting on these...it has been worthwhile.

ptholden - 17 Sep 2007 21:12 - 17 of 352

Course you have Hlyeo, of course you have, so unlike you to keep quiet for so long. Ever thought of becoming a stock ambulance chaser?

hlyeo98 - 17 Sep 2007 22:57 - 18 of 352

hehe I can see someone is caught in the web.

cynic - 18 Sep 2007 08:28 - 19 of 352

HYLEO ..... not clear if you mean "sell prop SHARES" or "sell physical houses" ..... if you mean the latter, then for sure you are talking bollocks ....... it would comne as no surprise if house prices in general stagnated or even fell back a little, for it is (imo) self-apparent that the rises over the last few years are unsustainable .... however, quality property in the right location will always be in high demand, even if selling them takes a little longer than of late

maddoctor - 18 Sep 2007 08:33 - 20 of 352

this child needs sending back to the dark side!

Big Al - 18 Sep 2007 08:37 - 21 of 352

I've believed for a couple of years that house prices will crash. It's only a matter of time IMO.

cynic - 18 Sep 2007 08:41 - 22 of 352

AL .... too sweeping a statement .... crash by how much and for how long?

hewittalan6 - 18 Sep 2007 08:47 - 23 of 352

They will fall, certainly, but Cynics is a fair question.
The other question is what the catalyst will be.
Tougher lending? Possibly. Higher rates? Seems unlikely for some time.
Higher unemployment? Perhaps, but the current unstable and low paid jobs culture hasn't done it.
Lower demand. Definitley. But this also seems unlikely unless the government does what people are demanding and creates massive investment in social housing and cheaper private housing. Those same people who demand that will the demand the PM's balls on a platter because there has been a housing "crash" and they are in negative equity.
Who'd be a politician?
Alan

Andy - 18 Sep 2007 08:54 - 24 of 352

Big Al,

Sooner or later you're bound to be right if yiu keep on saying it long enough!

Actually the last 'crash' was far from that, more of a slow downward spiral which lasted a few years.

hewittalan6 - 18 Sep 2007 08:55 - 25 of 352

Another random thought on house prices.
Your view on the direction is often driven by your own hopes for them, and that differs very much by life stage.
As a FTB, I would be hoping for a crash and looking for the signs, so I could afford to get on the ladder.
As a growing family in a small semi, I would be looking for stability so I could save up and move on, but a crash is no good as my equity would be swept away and I would be stuck.
As I reached retirement and the family moved on, I would desire a boom before I downsized, so that I had more equity than ever before to ease my life in retirement.
Whatever happens with house prices, some will be delighted, others horrified. Classic no win.

Big Al - 18 Sep 2007 09:02 - 26 of 352

I think 30% is not unlikely with little or no recovery until 2015 or thereabouts.

Andy - the last crash was a crash and make no mistake. I know someone who bought in Norfolk in '88 having knocked around 20% off the asking price and he was still in negative equity for alomst all the 90's.

This time around you hear of 9x multiples being lent with interest rates being their lowest in 40years in 2005. Anyone who thinks a crash is not on the cards is a helluva dumb-ass IMO.

BTW, I've no properties in my investment, having sold up some time ago. They were bought 94/95. ;-))

cynic - 18 Sep 2007 09:46 - 27 of 352

i happen to own my house, which we bought in 1986 at what we thought to be absolute top dollar, but that has increased 6-fold and perhaps more ..... it happens to be in an ace positon and, for various reasons, almost unique (for lack of a better word) ...... even if prices fall, and our house is included, i'll not care much, for if we move then it will be to downsize.

i also bought a small freehold off Portobello Market in 1978 for what is now a risible sum ...... that has risen exponentially and for various reasons has further still to go . ..... by miles the best investment i ever made, though did not realise at the time.

point i am trying to make is that with property, quality and location (location, location) will always be a sound investment ....

though beware of companies who try to drag you in on that, for we also got totally screwed on a couple of EIS deals where the commercial properties, allegedly bought on the cheap, seemingly did no better than stand still over a number of years.

cynic - 18 Sep 2007 09:49 - 28 of 352

even if X rents, then Y has clearly bought, and Z has obviously sold!

Stan - 18 Sep 2007 09:55 - 29 of 352

Never bought and sold property as an investment but might be worth looking at should prices retract in the future.

ED: Sorry getting off topic here.

chocolat - 18 Sep 2007 09:58 - 30 of 352

I agree with you, cynic (ha, make a note!) "quality property in the right location will always be in high demand", but that doesn't constitute the market as a whole by any stretch.

cynic - 18 Sep 2007 10:02 - 31 of 352

hi choccy .... long time no flirt!
one could draw the same parallel with shares!

hlyeo98 - 18 Sep 2007 11:24 - 32 of 352

Cynic, it is shares I'm talking about now...but in the near future, house prices will also drop.
Register now or login to post to this thread.