Page 3 of 6 FirstFirst 12345 ... LastLast
Results 31 to 45 of 88

Thread: NZ houses among least affordable

  1. #31
    Join Date
    5th August 2005 - 14:30
    Bike
    Various
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    4,359
    Quote Originally Posted by Swoop View Post

    A survey author blamed tight land supply for New Zealand's housing squeeze, saying excessive land use regulation had strangled subdivision expansion and artificially pushed up prices.
    My oldest brother was around the other day, and being the good capitalist that he is has decided to chop his section in half and sell one half.

    Seeing the prices of sections lately I am thinking he will make a fair bit of money so ask him about the other side of the equasion. Costs. He advised it would cost about $55,000 to make the cut. What??? He recons the council gets about $35,000 $38,000 to rubber stamp the deal.

    And you wonder why sections are so expensive.
    Quote Originally Posted by Tank
    You say "no one wants to fuck with some large bloke on a really angry sounding bike" but the truth of the matter is that you are a balding middle-aged ice-cream seller from Edgecume who wears a hello kitty t-shirt (in your profile pic) and your angry sounding bike is a fucken hyoshit - not some big assed harley with a human skull on the front.

  2. #32
    Join Date
    11th June 2006 - 15:52
    Bike
    Suzuki GSX1250FA, TGB 50cc moped
    Location
    Horowhenua
    Posts
    1,879
    Its actually speculators doing it, not investors.

    In fact the traditional equation of making sure the rental income covers the cost of the loan plus outgoings has been long forgotten.

    People are now investing in property because of the (untaxed) capital gains.

    Trouble is, it's artificial growth - the contributing factors being a barrier to new land being cut up (aka resource Management Act), wealthy population increase (often due to immigration, but now slowing), the lack of a tax on capital gain, and the number of new speculative investors entering the market.

    Its self destructive - lets say for example that growth starts to slow. Then the returns from capital gain slow. So its less attractive to invest in. So there are less speculators. hmm, the bubble bursts.

    Realistically, it can't be sustained. The trick is to guess exactly when it will stop. I guessed 2 years ago and got out of property and got it very very wrong.

    but, you pay your money and take your chances.
    David must play fair with the other kids, even the idiots.

  3. #33
    Join Date
    16th October 2005 - 15:34
    Bike
    ZX14
    Location
    Papakura
    Posts
    322
    Quote Originally Posted by davereid View Post
    Its actually speculators doing it, not investors.

    In fact the traditional equation of making sure the rental income covers the cost of the loan plus outgoings has been long forgotten.

    People are now investing in property because of the (untaxed) capital gains.

    Trouble is, it's artificial growth - the contributing factors being a barrier to new land being cut up (aka resource Management Act), wealthy population increase (often due to immigration, but now slowing), the lack of a tax on capital gain, and the number of new speculative investors entering the market.

    Its self destructive - lets say for example that growth starts to slow. Then the returns from capital gain slow. So its less attractive to invest in. So there are less speculators. hmm, the bubble bursts.

    Realistically, it can't be sustained. The trick is to guess exactly when it will stop. I guessed 2 years ago and got out of property and got it very very wrong.

    but, you pay your money and take your chances.
    I thought the same thing, but diversified by adding in a spec home here and their to create some cash flow to get my rental balance in a better position in case of the bubble bursting (when?). I'm glad that I kept them now as their capital gains have made up for any stress I've had!

  4. #34
    Join Date
    5th August 2005 - 14:30
    Bike
    Various
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    4,359
    Quote Originally Posted by iwilde View Post
    It can, and maybe will. When investors are greedy and buy sayu 10 house at near peak prices, everything is a very tight margin and it only takes one factor to upset the balance and cause an investor to sell quickly at a bargin price. Low influx of immigrants, interest rates have risen when their interest only morgages break, a couple of tenants kicking in the walls and taking off without paying the rent...etc...Can happen and if it does the major cause of it will be greed.
    Sure it has happened in the past, however, that doesn't really relate to the scenario I presented, or it would appear MisterD was aluding to.

    What you describe is something quite different and could happen at any time, not just when the baby boomers want to liquidate.

    As well as that many factors have changed. The banks, having been burnt before facing the situation where the very mortgagee sales they were using to recover their debt were forcing house prices down and creating more mortgee sales and significant losses for those banks have tightened there criteria in this respect. Some simply will not do it, or may require them to put in a lot more of their own money than in the past when a person has too many rentals.

    Plus people are a lot more aware of this issue now (having experienced it in the not too distant past) and are less likely to put themselves in that situation.
    Quote Originally Posted by Tank
    You say "no one wants to fuck with some large bloke on a really angry sounding bike" but the truth of the matter is that you are a balding middle-aged ice-cream seller from Edgecume who wears a hello kitty t-shirt (in your profile pic) and your angry sounding bike is a fucken hyoshit - not some big assed harley with a human skull on the front.

  5. #35
    Join Date
    5th August 2005 - 14:30
    Bike
    Various
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    4,359
    Quote Originally Posted by Swoop View Post
    By Anne Gibson
    The third Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey released today showed it takes Aucklanders 6.9 years of full annual earnings of $57,500 to afford the $395,000 median house price.

    Wellington fared better in place 47 with its residents taking 5.4 years (earning $61,400 annually) to afford the $331,000 median.
    Ok any guesses as to why the smaller of these cities has the larger incomes, against the trend?

    I wonder if some people are being grossly over paid and skewing the result?
    Quote Originally Posted by Tank
    You say "no one wants to fuck with some large bloke on a really angry sounding bike" but the truth of the matter is that you are a balding middle-aged ice-cream seller from Edgecume who wears a hello kitty t-shirt (in your profile pic) and your angry sounding bike is a fucken hyoshit - not some big assed harley with a human skull on the front.

  6. #36
    Join Date
    3rd July 2003 - 12:00
    Bike
    Scorpio, XL1200N
    Location
    forests of azure
    Posts
    9,398
    Quote Originally Posted by CaN View Post
    Ok ay guesses as to why the smaller of these cities has the larger incomes, against the trend?

    I wonder if some people are being grossly over paid and skewing the result?
    Nup.

    It's because Wellington, in comparison to Auckland, has very little industry employing large numbers of low-wage workers. Therefore the average goes up.
    kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
    - mikey

  7. #37
    Join Date
    1st November 2005 - 08:18
    Bike
    F-117.
    Location
    Banana Republic of NZ
    Posts
    7,048
    Quote Originally Posted by CaN View Post
    He recons the council gets about $35,000 $38,000 to rubber stamp the deal.

    And you wonder why sections are so expensive.
    Possibly to pay for the mistakes of others... See post #21...
    TOP QUOTE: “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money.”

  8. #38
    Join Date
    16th October 2005 - 15:34
    Bike
    ZX14
    Location
    Papakura
    Posts
    322
    Quote Originally Posted by CaN View Post
    Sure it has happened in the past, however, that doesn't really relate to the scenario I presented, or it would appear MisterD was aluding to.

    What you describe is something quite different and could happen at any time, not just when the baby boomers want to liquidate.

    As well as that many factors have changed. The banks, having been burnt before facing the situation where the very mortgagee sales they were using to recover their debt were forcing house prices down and creating more mortgee sales and significant losses for those banks have tightened there criteria in this respect. Some simply will not do it, or may require them to put in a lot more of their own money than in the past when a person has too many rentals.

    Plus people are a lot more aware of this issue now (having experienced it in the not too distant past) and are less likely to put themselves in that situation.
    I can't see every baby boomer selling all their assets at once. I can see a few of them selling one or two to free up some cash for enjoyment or putting other rentals to a positive cash flow. With housing the way it is I can see a lot of baby boomers putting rentals in trusts for their children or grandchildren as a way to future proof inheritance. I would, or should I say in 30yrs I will. I also can't see that the banks will cause a drop with morgagee sales as they are lending 100% and have far to much invested in the property market that way to create a fall, they're banking on captial gain for their slice of the pie.

  9. #39
    Join Date
    13th April 2005 - 12:00
    Bike
    Enfield cr250r
    Location
    Tokyo
    Posts
    3,430
    Blog Entries
    4
    Quote Originally Posted by Motu View Post
    My daughter and her partner shifted into their new house less than 6 months ago....they have two adjoining sections and built on one,their mortgage is about $110,000 and managable on a single income,the new house was valued at $165,000 when it was built,the new garage was finished on thursday and now there is enough equity to start building on the other section...if they want to.Huntly is an hour from Auckland and half and hour from Hamilton....they consider they made a damn good choice to come down here,no way would they have their own home in Auckland.
    We had a look, but the thing was work, I know an hour isnt a bad commute ,,,but thats a few KM in NZ, there are a few places still cheap ,,the problem is work. not a lot of it in them places

    Stephen
    "Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."

  10. #40
    Join Date
    28th April 2004 - 11:42
    Bike
    tedium
    Location
    earth
    Posts
    3,526
    Quote Originally Posted by CaN View Post
    I wonder if some people are being grossly over paid and skewing the result?
    If I remember maffs correctly then median is the middle value.

    e.g.
    NAME Salary
    Dickie Branson 10,000,000
    Lawyer Skum 200,000
    Average Joe 55,000
    Average Joe 53,000
    Average Joe 35,000
    Low Earner 13,000

    Average (or mean) = 1,726,000
    Median = 54,000

  11. #41
    Join Date
    3rd September 2005 - 08:19
    Bike
    .
    Location
    .
    Posts
    3,712
    It's our fuckin parents generation that are fucking it up for young people with their greed and retarded "let every fuckin rich gook under the sun into NZ so we can cream their cash off them" policy.

    Investment properties, over inflated market due to (parasitic education hunting) immigrants, lack of capital gains tax. It's totally fucked.

    Even on two incomes we're struggling to buy a shit hole in a p-lab/ tinnie house infested coon ridden ghetto. Fuck paying more in a mortgage to live next door to a bunch of fucking porch monkeys that'll rob us as soon as we go to work than we do in rent for a fucking choice house.

    We don't want or need a palace and why the fuck should I have to pay more for travel (gas/maintenance/tyres etc) than I would for accomodation??

    I hope all the arseholes that have shaped this housing market die a horrible painful death and that the short sighted fucked up politicians suffer double.

    I'll get where I want to go, but I'll be a bitter cynical cunt in the process.

    And don't give me any of that young people, flash car, flash bike, HP bullshit you self righteous old wankers. Given my time again I'd have told the old man to stick his uni education up his arse and been a fuckin tradesman. (I would at least be able to justify my penchant for the tradesmans entrance then)

    Still, we'll all be laughing when we buy all you old cunts houses and then watch the niggers terrorising you in your retirement villages, you can fuckin defend yourselfs.

  12. #42
    Join Date
    3rd March 2004 - 22:43
    Bike
    Guzzi
    Location
    In Paradise
    Posts
    2,490
    Quote Originally Posted by Ixion View Post
    Years ago, when we HAD a Socialist government , this problem was well sorted. We did indeed have a capital gains tax, and we had something called the State Advances Corporation, that financed people into their first home.At nominal interest rates. We also had inflation proofed savings bonds, so that the value of your deposit wasn't eroded while you were saving it, tax deductions for interest on home loan accounts ,and a lot of other good ideas, that in total meant that NZ had the highest home ownership ratio in the world. And no homeless people, and noone living in garages.

    Then a right wing capitalist ideologue called Roger Douglas destroyed the whole apparatus in the name of "the market" , and the only people who benefited were the speculators and banks.

    My answer is simple and effective. Nationalise the banks, impose a strict capital gains tax and death duties, and return State housing to its original purpose. All can be done within a few weeks, all it needs is political will (or a brick wall and a few bullets)

    EDIT: And as Mr Finn observes, back then we had Building Codes , and council inspectors who were proper tradesmen and knew what they were doing. So the houses were good solid ones that have invariably lasted half a century alread, not the present leaky, jerry built ramshackle dog kennels we have today. Of course we didn't have property speculators making millions of dollars erecting the dog kennels, either.
    What that man said. We are in the process of helping our daughter get her first home. She lives in Auckland. Without our help they would be paying land lords for the rest of their lives.


    Skyryder
    Free Scott Watson.

  13. #43
    Join Date
    21st December 2006 - 07:09
    Bike
    Suzuki GSXR1100 96
    Location
    Wellywood
    Posts
    289
    [QUOTE=The_Dover;

    I hope all the arseholes that have shaped this housing market die a horrible painful death and that the short sighted fucked up politicians suffer double.

    I'll get where I want to go, but I'll be a bitter cynical cunt in the process.

    And don't give me any of that young people, flash car, flash bike, HP bullshit you self righteous old wankers. Given my time again I'd have told the old man to stick his uni education up his arse and been a fuckin tradesman. (I would at least be able to justify my penchant for the tradesmans entrance then)

    Still, we'll all be laughing when we buy all you old cunts houses and then watch the niggers terrorising you in your retirement villages, you can fuckin defend yourselfs.[/QUOTE]

    Yeah and those parasitic realestate fuckers grind my nuts when I sold my house down south privately the fuckers kept ringing me when they saw the add in the local rag.I told them to fuck off but they kept saying it would be too hard to sell privately well fuck me if it didnt sell that weekend and for twice what we paid for it> These pricks are lower than low and are partly responsible for driving the market up!! Scum sucking bottom feeders when you work out the fees they charge to sell the house it equates to over $800 an hour! I hope they all get the clap and their dicks fall off!! Ill stay renting till the market collapses under its own weight and then clean up!!!!!
    NEVER LET THE TRUTH GET IN THE WAY OF A GOOD STORY!

  14. #44
    Join Date
    23rd November 2003 - 21:16
    Bike
    big red one, rgv's, kdx's
    Location
    Wellington
    Posts
    690
    One of my older clients was selling her house, she and her late husband had built the house, raised her kids and grandkids in the place and wanted to sell it to "a nice young family."

    I think she had 20 people inquire. out of that only 2 wanted to live in the place themselves. The rest were people trying to get in on the capital gain game. In the first round of tenders the first two were knocked out. Took 5 rounds of the so called tender process to get a winner.

    We need a capital gains tax, as for making land more easily available, you should see how easily the big developers are able to bribe there way into property that nobody else could legally aquire.

  15. #45
    Join Date
    20th August 2003 - 10:00
    Bike
    'o6 Spewzooki Banned it.
    Location
    Costa del Nord
    Posts
    6,553
    Rising house prices, I just love it.
    We've had around 200% return on our investment in 5 years.
    Tax free!
    I wonder if Alan Bollard can show me a NZ company share that has done that.
    Speed doesn't kill people.
    Stupidity kills people.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •