House Prices Now At 2004 Levels
Flightman, I often get the impression you are a bit bitter about the way the whole housing market has gone over the last 15 years. Why is this?
Also it seems to me rather than taking advantage of actual current situations you are waiting for your doomsday scenario to play out. This scenario may never happen or may take another 5 years. So either you'll go to your deathbed screaming to your children that it will all crash or you'll have wasted close on 20 years of your life waiting to be proved right.
But in that 20 years many people have sorted themselves out very nicely.
I'm not having a dig by the way, you're a nice chap and have been very helpful to me. It's just on this matter I think you've got slightly tunnel vision.
Also it seems to me rather than taking advantage of actual current situations you are waiting for your doomsday scenario to play out. This scenario may never happen or may take another 5 years. So either you'll go to your deathbed screaming to your children that it will all crash or you'll have wasted close on 20 years of your life waiting to be proved right.
But in that 20 years many people have sorted themselves out very nicely.
I'm not having a dig by the way, you're a nice chap and have been very helpful to me. It's just on this matter I think you've got slightly tunnel vision.
Flightman, I often get the impression you are a bit bitter about the way the whole housing market has gone over the last 15 years. Why is this?
Also it seems to me rather than taking advantage of actual current situations you are waiting for your doomsday scenario to play out. This scenario may never happen or may take another 5 years. So either you'll go to your deathbed screaming to your children that it will all crash or you'll have wasted close on 20 years of your life waiting to be proved right.
But in that 20 years many people have sorted themselves out very nicely.
I'm not having a dig by the way, you're a nice chap and have been very helpful to me. It's just on this matter I think you've got slightly tunnel vision.
Also it seems to me rather than taking advantage of actual current situations you are waiting for your doomsday scenario to play out. This scenario may never happen or may take another 5 years. So either you'll go to your deathbed screaming to your children that it will all crash or you'll have wasted close on 20 years of your life waiting to be proved right.
But in that 20 years many people have sorted themselves out very nicely.
I'm not having a dig by the way, you're a nice chap and have been very helpful to me. It's just on this matter I think you've got slightly tunnel vision.
No offence taken.
Any bitterness you perceive, and I'd actually call it frustration or annoyance rather than bitterness, stems from the destruction of our economy on the alter of ever rising house prices,and the cheap credit required to fund the purchase of those properties. My personal circumstances mean I don't need need to move house, so I'm not wasting anything thanks, let alone 20 years.
No offence taken.
Any bitterness you perceive, and I'd actually call it frustration or annoyance rather than bitterness, stems from the destruction of our economy on the alter of ever rising house prices,and the cheap credit required to fund the purchase of those properties. My personal circumstances mean I don't need need to move house, so I'm not wasting anything thanks, let alone 20 years.
Any bitterness you perceive, and I'd actually call it frustration or annoyance rather than bitterness, stems from the destruction of our economy on the alter of ever rising house prices,and the cheap credit required to fund the purchase of those properties. My personal circumstances mean I don't need need to move house, so I'm not wasting anything thanks, let alone 20 years.
You wont change the world so get on with living .


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Long term, property is the best place to invest your cash.
I'd like to see some figures backing this statement up.
If you look at house prices in relation to earnings, you will see that they are reasonably interlinked, i.e. house prices can not get too far out of kilter relative to earnings (this makes sense, if you think about it, because if house prices got more and more expensive in relation to earnings, then eventually nobody would be able to afford a house, even the queen).
The reason house prices (and everything else) has gone up in "numbers" is of course wage growth. Some of the wage growth is down to genuine "growth" in the economy etc, but I think most of it is down to inflation and wages keeping up with inflation only.
Stocks and shares are also inflation linked to an extent, and I think that if you did some research (I haven't), you might find that shares have kept up or beaten house prices. Gold might also be a good candidate at the moment.
If you look at house prices in relation to earnings, you will see that they are reasonably interlinked, i.e. house prices can not get too far out of kilter relative to earnings (this makes sense, if you think about it, because if house prices got more and more expensive in relation to earnings, then eventually nobody would be able to afford a house, even the queen).
The reason house prices (and everything else) has gone up in "numbers" is of course wage growth. Some of the wage growth is down to genuine "growth" in the economy etc, but I think most of it is down to inflation and wages keeping up with inflation only.
Stocks and shares are also inflation linked to an extent, and I think that if you did some research (I haven't), you might find that shares have kept up or beaten house prices. Gold might also be a good candidate at the moment.
If you're an owner-occupier and buying in a part of the country (or world) where supply consistently fails to keep up with demand, that's undoubtedly the case.
Stocks and shares are also inflation linked to an extent, and I think that if you did some research (I haven't), you might find that shares have kept up or beaten house prices. Gold might also be a good candidate at the moment.[/QUOTE]
But the thing that gives Property the edge ,is that you can enjoy it/use it, as an investment ,eg live in it .Now what is that worth ??
All you do with shares/gold is see the value on paper .Not a lot of fun really .IMO .
But the thing that gives Property the edge ,is that you can enjoy it/use it, as an investment ,eg live in it .Now what is that worth ??
All you do with shares/gold is see the value on paper .Not a lot of fun really .IMO .
Alan, I have read varying reports about what gives the best return over the long run ie stocks (with dividends reinvested) vs property. Some say one some say the other, to some extent it depends when you start measuring this from and how you measure it. Like all statistics it is fraught with difficulties, so to my mind there is no clear answer to the question.
Alan, I have read varying reports about what gives the best return over the long run ie stocks (with dividends reinvested) vs property. Some say one some say the other, to some extent it depends when you start measuring this from and how you measure it. Like all statistics it is fraught with difficulties, so to my mind there is no clear answer to the question.
If you look at this chart - http://www.housepricecrash.co.uk/gra...ouse-price.php Even buying at the low point and selling at the high, you would still have done much better in stocks growing (with reinvested dividends) at a conservative average of 5% a year. I'm sure the real average for that timescale is over 10%, which blows houses out of the water. Then you have to factor in the cost of any maintenance, which obviously with stocks is done by management and the overall growth figures include things like capex. But with a house you may have spent quite a bit that will somewhat increase your true investment.
Last edited by GlesgaKiss; May 11, 2011 at 12:13 PM.
Quite well. Just like a stock bought for pennies back then and sold for pounds today probably.
Last edited by GlesgaKiss; May 11, 2011 at 02:17 PM.
Congratulations if that's you or anyone you know btw (although I guess you will be too young for it to be you!). It would be interesting to know where and what kind of property/house that was.
Past performance is no guarantee of future performance.
You won't see those returns on property again because the market won't see the mass liberalisation/democratisation of credit again - it can only happen one.
You won't see those returns on property again because the market won't see the mass liberalisation/democratisation of credit again - it can only happen one.
shares would have to work pretty hard to match that surely
Yeah, they would. But like the house, in rare cases it can happen. All I was saying above was that, for the vast majority, stocks seem to be a better route to take, unless you're happy hoping to get lucky and using that chance to offset the more likely poorer growth of savings than that of stocks.
Yeah, they would. But like the house, in rare cases it can happen. All I was saying above was that, for the vast majority, stocks seem to be a better route to take, unless you're happy hoping to get lucky and using that chance to offset the more likely poorer growth of savings than that of stocks.
I would have to disagree and say that for the vast majority the risk of losing everything on stocks is not an option !!
Bricks and mortar are the safest bet .
Can't see how you would be in a position to predict what's going to happen over the next thirty years. How comes you are in a position to say so surely and accurately what will happen

Don't you still live with your mum??
The point about the housing market is that it is completely none uniform across the country.
Houses in areas where people aspire to and wish to live have not decreased in value during the past few years they have just increased at a slower rate.
Houses in areas where people aspire to and wish to live have not decreased in value during the past few years they have just increased at a slower rate.
I wonder what the odds of even a noticeable chunk of, say, thirty prominent companies all going bust at the same time are, especially if they mostly do different things?
And I may be wrong ,but do the deficits in the pension schemes not corrulate to bad investments in stocks/shares,and endowments that are worth D1ck after 20 yrs of investment also come back to bad investment in stocks/shares ??
But yes maybe aliens will come down and vaporize half the housing stock so yes I don't know.
Thanks. So unless there is an alien attack specifically on housing stock in the UK your predictions on property prices over the next 30 years or so will be spot on?
Forgive me if I totally ignore investment advice from a guy who still lives with his mum

Prices have crashed in the past, will crash in the future. History shows us this!
Granted, over the long term - considering that a house is also a requirement of living - the cost of providing a roof over your head has been profitable, if buying rather than renting.
However, I do think that the housing market is currently on the edge of a cliff ...... it is well balanced - low interest rates are anchoring it to the cliff top. You remove low interest rates and remove any lingering confidence and we will see a crash. It's taking its time - I have been hoping for one for years now ...... just when I give up and buy another property it will happen!!
If you bought in 1989 and had to sell in 1991, as an example, you would have a very different view. I can only assume that you were too young to be a houseowner then?
Prices have crashed in the past, will crash in the future. History shows us this!
Granted, over the long term - considering that a house is also a requirement of living - the cost of providing a roof over your head has been profitable, if buying rather than renting.
However, I do think that the housing market is currently on the edge of a cliff ...... it is well balanced - low interest rates are anchoring it to the cliff top. You remove low interest rates and remove any lingering confidence and we will see a crash. It's taking its time - I have been hoping for one for years now ...... just when I give up and buy another property it will happen!!
Prices have crashed in the past, will crash in the future. History shows us this!
Granted, over the long term - considering that a house is also a requirement of living - the cost of providing a roof over your head has been profitable, if buying rather than renting.
However, I do think that the housing market is currently on the edge of a cliff ...... it is well balanced - low interest rates are anchoring it to the cliff top. You remove low interest rates and remove any lingering confidence and we will see a crash. It's taking its time - I have been hoping for one for years now ...... just when I give up and buy another property it will happen!!










