johnhemming2 wrote:little john wrote:
The demand from Eastern European purchasers for UK property has dropped because of Brexit. Some have dropped out of buying property or offered a lower price simply because of the referendum vote. Nothing to do with interest rates.
Jesus wept, this is not just about London
I am not saying interest rates are irrelevant, but demand can be affected by things other than the availability of finance.
Interest rates are not the fundamental problem. They are a symptom of it. The problem is money issued as debt with interest attached
I know of a case where Eastern Europeans pulled out of a purchase because of the Brexit vote outside London. It is not just about london.
Secondly, as we have discussed elsewhere the notes and coins on your pocket don't pay any interest.
And as I have pointed out, on the back of your own quoted numbers, note and coins account for around 3%, at most, of the money supply in this country
Secondly, contrary to what you appear to be implying, that house prices falling is a bad thing, it is not. It is a good thing.
Thirdly, monetary policy
is what has driven prices to unsustainable levels. And, despite that monetary policy being driven to new extremes (ZIRP and near ZIRP), a lack of well enough paid work is what is causing prices to finally falter.
Market size is driven by underlying material demand
However, if the prices in that market can only be met with debt, market vigour/volume is driven by capacity to service the debt
Demand is as big as ever. It is market volume that has collapsed. Market volume will only cause prices to rise within the constraints of what money is available. For prices to rise above that ceiling, extra money must be available. The insane prices rises in real estate over the last three decades is a consequence of demand in the context of an unregulated system of money-as-debt creation and near ZIRP has merely been a last-gasp attempt to try to keep that party going. Demand alone would have hit a price ceiling long ago
One of three things will cause that volume to return; cheaper debt, greater capacity to service the debt or cheaper prices