Jump to content

House Price Inflation Pros and Cons


Recommended Posts

I'm with *bob* and Cookie, this is all over my head, and I fear it always will be!


I find the whole thing depressing, and whilst I'm sure you're all lovely people (I know for a fact that some of you are), reading this is just making me feel rather jealous and hopeless, and I'm having wicked fantasy's about lots of houses burning down (whilst empty of course)...


Thing is, you'd only claim over the odds back on the insurance! ;-)


Sorry :-$

Link to comment
Share on other sites

AcedOut Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Bob - we could have a conversation about the

> relative merits of the change into the dominant

> key for popular music of the 1980-1990's is you

> like. What are your favorites? Westlife have

> some real winners!


Ha Ha,

Certainly not! That would be off-topic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If any of the 'laymen' are interested, there nothing too daunting about it. City boys love to use as many odd terms as often as possible to confuse people and make themselves look clever.


Calls and Puts are options that allow you to mitigate risk against rising or falling prices, ie the right to buy or exchange something at a rate in the future regardless of what the future market rate is.

Deltas measure the sensitivity of a derivative (usually a 'future' such as a call or a put) to changes in price of the underlying (the real thing, share, bond, coal) price.

Gammas are basically the sensitivity of the sensitivity.


All this in terms of their day to day job amounts to being glorified spread betters, with lots of clever people crunching numbers to help them do their job.


Gearing or leverage is making money out of (mostly) someone else's money to help you make more money (hopefully).


Hope that helps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see this week in one of the estate agents that 2-beds in this neighbourhood (off LL near Dulwich Park) are now at the heady heights of 300k. This compares to around 225k a year ago.


This takes such properties over the 3% stamp duty threshold. Not good news at all. It was once possible to pay stamp duty out of income, but that's no longer the case.


It also takes a 2-bed over the inheritance tax threshold - probably not good news for co-habitees that don't have the property in both names. And fairly dreadful news for any co-habiting new mums out there: if your partner dies and the property is in his name, you could find yourself homeless even if you inherit the property (no money to pay the mortgage OR the tax bill).


The same of course applies to larger homes, but 2-beds is where people tend to start, and many young families will be struggling to get a house of any kind with current prices.


Louisiana

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My two-bed flat (no garden) last December received the asking price of ?315k (agents valued between ?285-?325). I turned it down and took the place off the market, but I think most 2-bed places are going for over ?300k now, well over the ?250k 3pc stamp duty threshold.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

AcedOut Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> My two-bed flat (no garden) last December received

> the asking price of ?315k (agents valued between

> ?285-?325). I turned it down and took the place

> off the market, but I think most 2-bed places are

> going for over ?300k now, well over the ?250k 3pc

> stamp duty threshold.


Oh boy, worse than I thought.


Though there's not much of anything around, as far as I can see (but have only looked in one window). Have higher prices led to complete sclerosis, I wonder? Or is everything just moving very fast? I notice the only place in my road to be up for sale recently seems to have had a sale agreed just a couple of days after appearing in the window (3 bed house with garage).


Louisiana

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Remortgaging jointly wont make any difference, its the title deeds that count.


Even then it all depends whether the ownership is a joint tenancy or tenancy in common. If a joint tenancy, survivorship applies and the property immediately belongs to the other joint tenant, the value falling outside of the estate and therefore IHT. If a tenancy in common it will however form part of the estate (albeit only the %age of the property owned by the tenant in common) and therefore be included in IHT calculations.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think Alan said he didn't mind when people who loved their jobs were priced out of the market and had to leave the area.


Well, there are alot of people working in key services such as nurses, midwives and teachers who are already upping sticks and leaving London. I'm not being funny but London can't survive with just investment bankers and stockbrokers living in the city - we need people working in the service areas that will support us, our kids, our parents and ourselves when we get older!! Public services and charities need workers who are able to afford to live in the area. Shared ownership schemes aren't enough. Maybe Alan you don't care now - but when you or a loved one need access to a service at a hopital or through social services or through a charity and you can't get the service because of staff shortages, then maybe you will.


Anyway, Euan Davies did an excellent three part documentary called the Homes we Live in (or something like that!) on Radio 4 recently where he expertly pointed to the danger of rising house prices - and he knows his economics!! I shall dig out the link on the Radio 4 website and post it so anyone can listen to it again!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • A bit like this: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/apr/27/tory-staff-running-network-of-anti-ulez-facebook-groups-riddled-with-racism-and-abuse
    • Because the council responsible for it is far-left....   And you haven't answered whether it is worth diverting emergency vehicles because a few cars drive through the LTN and why some lobby groups have been so desperate to close it to emergency vehicles.    Emergency services hate non-permeable junctions as they lengthen response times....f you remember it's why the council had to redesign the DV junction because emergency services kept telling them they needed to be able to drive through it...but the council resisted and resisted until they finally relented because the emergency services said their LTN had increased response times....sorry if the truth gets in the way of a good story but those are facts. The council was putting lives at risk because they refused to open the junction to emergency services. Why? What could have been the motivation for that? So, in fact, it was the emergency services who forced the council (kicking and screaming) to remove the permanent barriers and allow emergency services access. So the council finally opened the junction to emergency services and is now coming back to re-close part of the junction.  Why?  Perhaps you should be asking who is lobbying the council to close the junction or parts of it or why the council is happy to waste so much of our money on it - who are they representing as even their own consultation demonstrated they did not have support from the local community for the measures? The results showed the majority of local residents were against the measure...but they are going ahead with them anyway.   In time, I am sure the truth will come to light and those rewponsbile will be held accountable but you have to admit there is something very unusual going on with that junction - its the very definition of a (very expensive) white elephant.    
    • A Roadblock that a civilised society wouldn’t allow. 
    • Now this is cycling  BBC News - Tweed Run London bike ride evokes spirit of yesteryear https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-68900476  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...