Got something to say or just want fewer pesky ads? Join us... 😊

[Finance] Housing Market

Will Coronavirus impact the housing market?

  • House prices will drop

    Votes: 73 42.0%
  • House prices will increase

    Votes: 36 20.7%
  • Do not care

    Votes: 16 9.2%
  • Far too early to know yet

    Votes: 49 28.2%

  • Total voters
    174


B-right-on

Living the dream
Apr 23, 2015
6,241
Shoreham Beaaaach
House prices have shot up ridiculously in the last few years. My energy bills have literally doubled in the last 12 months and when we tried to see if there was a better tariff (on EDF standard now), Uswitch said don't bother until April. Food prices are going up. Fuel - don't get me started.

Hard to see where and how this all ends. Except in the shitter.
 




Live by the sea

Well-known member
Oct 21, 2016
4,718
It’s quite amazing really that whilst 95% of so called property market experts along with financial advisors all said the market would either fall or remain flat., the exact opposite has happened and we’ve had at least a 10% rise in house prices over the last 18 months . In prime areas like central Hove , the rise has been almost 15%.

What does that tell us ? Never trust property experts or Financial advisors because all they are doing is guessing and often they guess wrong .
 


jakarta

Well-known member
May 25, 2007
15,640
Sullington
Clearly house prices depend on where in the UK you live.

Given the amount of house building HDC have allowed in and around Horsham they must have been advised there is plenty of demand so prices only going one way around here.

Pesornally (selfishly?) not really bothered one way or the other, our mortgage is paid off, Mrs Jakarta retired on a Headteachers pension, I'm looking to knock My Consultancy Business on the head shortly and cash in my pension pot while still doing a bit of University work.

We love where live and won't be moving anwhere else.

If our house 'value' halved it wouldn't make the slightest difference to our lifestyles. Although I think that scenairo highly unlikely...
 
Last edited:


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
52,909
Burgess Hill
Clearly house prices depend on where in the UK you live.

Given the amount of house building HDC have allowed in and around Horsham they must have been advised there is plenty of demand so prices only going one way around here.

Peronally (selfishly?) not really bothered one way or the other, our mortgage is paid off, Mrs Jakarta retired on a Headteachers pension, I'm looking to knock My Consultancy Business on the head shortly and cash in my pension pot while still doing a bit of University work.

We love where live and won't be moving anwhere else.

If our house 'value' halved it wouldn't make the slightest difference to our lifestyles. Although I think that scenairo highly unlikely...

Similar here really - been in the same house 20-odd years and won't be moving, however have two kids who will at some point want to get their own places - both currently rent similar-sized flats, one pays £350 a month (Scottish Borders) and the other pays £1,100 (Burgess Hill) - the regional disparity is immense. A decent fall would help one of them out (or reduce the amount we'll need to help them out in reality) once that time comes.
 






D

Deleted member 22389

Guest
Sold my mums house last year and purchased a new flat for her. In 6 months the same new build flat is now 10k more to buy. House prices are ridiculous and I don't see it ending anytime soon. Obviously not local people buying up, but people leaving London and Brighton who have plenty of money to buy here. Feel sorry for young people.

If it's not new builds, what they are doing now is buying up the bungalows, knocking the thing down and putting two houses up in its place. The houses are nothing special, most I have seen don't have a garage, they are asking for £400,000+ and selling them in weeks.
 
Last edited by a moderator:


beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,393
It’s quite amazing really that whilst 95% of so called property market experts along with financial advisors all said the market would either fall or remain flat., the exact opposite has happened and we’ve had at least a 10% rise in house prices over the last 18 months . In prime areas like central Hove , the rise has been almost 15%.

What does that tell us ? Never trust property experts or Financial advisors because all they are doing is guessing and often they guess wrong .

not quite fair. predictions were based on assumption of poor recovery after covid, employment down, growth sluggish. but the recovery has been quite perky, employment risen (higher then pre-covid), growth is robust. that reflects in the housing market as people feel confident to move, or dont need to move due to changing circumstance.
 


Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
5,499
It's striking reading through the past comments on this thread. Everyone was predicting a fall/crash etc, and if I had posted a comment on this thread, it would have been the same. Thinking back, I would have predicted something like a 10-20% fall.

I can't think of one single person (whether property expert, homeowner, renter etc) who correctly predicted that prices would rise as a result of the pandemic. Nobody predicted that people would want to move to a bigger house, the country, or look for another bedroom or shed to work from home.

Why were we all so completely wrong?
 




knocky1

Well-known member
Jan 20, 2010
13,001
It's striking reading through the past comments on this thread. Everyone was predicting a fall/crash etc, and if I had posted a comment on this thread, it would have been the same. Thinking back, I would have predicted something like a 10-20% fall.

I can't think of one single person (whether property expert, homeowner, renter etc) who correctly predicted that prices would rise as a result of the pandemic. Nobody predicted that people would want to move to a bigger house, the country, or look for another bedroom or shed to work from home.

Why were we all so completely wrong?

I wasn't.
 


Weststander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 25, 2011
64,715
Withdean area
It’s quite amazing really that whilst 95% of so called property market experts along with financial advisors all said the market would either fall or remain flat., the exact opposite has happened and we’ve had at least a 10% rise in house prices over the last 18 months . In prime areas like central Hove , the rise has been almost 15%.

What does that tell us ? Never trust property experts or Financial advisors because all they are doing is guessing and often they guess wrong .

I’ve consistently said that house prices will rise.

Supply and demand, simple.

The UK’s population has increased by 10m since 1997. Additional housing supply (social and private) has barely touched that. Planning authorities and nimbies opposing countless proposals.
 


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
52,909
Burgess Hill
Clearly house prices depend on where in the UK you live.

Given the amount of house building HDC have allowed in and around Horsham they must have been advised there is plenty of demand so prices only going one way around here.

Peronally (selfishly?) not really bothered one way or the other, our mortgage is paid off, Mrs Jakarta retired on a Headteachers pension, I'm looking to knock My Consultancy Business on the head shortly and cash in my pension pot while still doing a bit of University work.

We love where live and won't be moving anwhere else.

If our house 'value' halved it wouldn't make the slightest difference to our lifestyles. Although I think that scenairo highly unlikely...

Wonder how much of the Horsham demand was calculated and predicated on Gatwick being fully functional and continuing to expand (instead of being 80% down or whatever the traffic is now with little likelihood of returning to pre-pandemic levels) ?
 




jakarta

Well-known member
May 25, 2007
15,640
Sullington
Think COVID has made many people realise the daily commute into London is farcical when modern technology means you can do whatever from home.

Hence why not buy a place in lovely West Sussex, probably close enough to a Station when you have to have that ballsaching Monthly Meeting in person, the rest of the time you can do your stuff from home, possibly still in your dressing gown.

Oh and you will have trousered enough from your lovely South London property to have cash purchased your Storrington/Pulborough/Billingshurst des res.
 


jakarta

Well-known member
May 25, 2007
15,640
Sullington
Wonder how much of the Horsham demand was calculated and predicated on Gatwick being fully functional and continuing to expand (instead of being 80% down or whatever the traffic is now with little likelihood of returning to pre-pandemic levels) ?

Drive past Horsham on a regular basis, don't see any Building Sites closing, see my previous post about the London Evacuation!
 


Weststander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 25, 2011
64,715
Withdean area
Wonder how much of the Horsham demand was calculated and predicated on Gatwick being fully functional and continuing to expand (instead of being 80% down or whatever the traffic is now with little likelihood of returning to pre-pandemic levels) ?

Imho Gatwick will be rapidly get back to being a busy airport. Albeit with Virgin only at Heathrow. Freeing up the hogging of slots will help.

Consumers have paid back personal debt and repaid chunks off their mortgages, with luxuries curtailed. Omicron ended up have similar metrics to the flu (DT science article this week). Pent up demand, people want to travel and holiday again.
 




nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
17,676
Gods country fortnightly
Interest that apartment prices have been pretty flat in many areas for the last decade, a real gap has opened up between these and house prices.
 


juliant

Well-known member
Apr 4, 2011
563
Northamptonshire
Similar here really - been in the same house 20-odd years and won't be moving, however have two kids who will at some point want to get their own places - both currently rent similar-sized flats, one pays £350 a month (Scottish Borders) and the other pays £1,100 (Burgess Hill) - the regional disparity is immense. A decent fall would help one of them out (or reduce the amount we'll need to help them out in reality) once that time comes.

£1100 a month for a flat in BH ???? Wow my little flat in Newport road 25 years ago was £350 a month !

Its not even like BH has much going for it nowadays except a deserted town centre and high costs to go with it.

Feel so sorry for the kids of today will have such a nightmare getting on the property ladder
 


Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,170
The arse end of Hangleton
So wrong when inflation is charging along at 5%+, pre GFC rates would be 7% and you'd be paying 8-8.5%

Why's that so wrong ? Surely it's a good deal for people with a mortgage ?
 


Stuart Munday

Well-known member
Jul 6, 2003
1,423
Saltdean
Put our 2 bedroom house on the market a few weeks ago for 300k, huge amount of interest mainly from young first time buyers, sold for £335k, absolutely ridiculous amount.
 




Uncle Spielberg

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
42,864
Lancing
Good call from the people who voted prices will increase. They have gone up 20% in the last 2 years
 


D

Deleted member 22389

Guest
Put our 2 bedroom house on the market a few weeks ago for 300k, huge amount of interest mainly from young first time buyers, sold for £335k, absolutely ridiculous amount.

That's what my mum got for bungalow last year, but it also had a big room in the roof. It needed a lot of work. The new guy who moved in, now has the builders in. Probably ripping the old property apart to make it open plan. Once done up, it would easily fetch £450,000+
 
Last edited by a moderator:


Albion and Premier League latest from Sky Sports


Top
Link Here