Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

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Look at the rental yield and asking price on this. Tell me something isn't wrong here. OK it will probably go for £150K but still it's a three bedroom flat that you're paying more than £1700pcm to rent, a fantastic return by any investor's standards.

I think the reason the price is so low is that it's on the 6th floor so you might not be able to get a mortgage on it. Another way banks screw over poor people (not all purchasers of their local authority flats made out good on the property ladder).

Yep, hard to get a mortgage on them. 

When I bought mine, it was fairly easy as it is ground floor in a four storey building but it still did not meet the requirements for 50pc of the flats to be privately owned so at least three major lenders would not consider it.  my block is only 33pc privately owned.

If it is on the fifth floor or higher of a large block, you will really struggle to find anyone to lend on it. If it is of a certain era (concrete construction), no one will lend on it either.

No chance of every buying your freehold and have to deal with the local authority to get repairs done but then again, privately owned blocks often have rubbish management companies and outrageous service charges too.

Ha ha i recognise that bathroom (private joke) - i must say it is a beautiful flat

Beautiful flat, nice decor, but 400k is a lot of money :O Good luck!

Given the new pension rules, the safe haven status, the government subsidies, the projected supply and projected demand, like it or not, houses or nice flats in London will be the new gold dust.

If the person that's selling that flat doesn't reinvest in London or a similar city it will be the sellers which actually turn out to be the big losers.

For good or bad, I believe we haven't seen anything like what's coming, the gap between the rich and poor is going to get medievil and it's all going to happen because of the price of housing is on a one way rocket ship for a long while, maybe until 2025.
Some evidence below ...
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Actually the pension rules fixed a major problem although I think in the medium to long term they do store up trouble. Having watched my own father save like a bastard and then die shortly after turning 64 I am perhaps more wary than most of how those pension annuities work. I also, as a non citizen of this country, could take my meagre pension pot back to NZ as a lump sump before this rule anyway.

I'd like to address your fear that this will cause a property price bubble. For a start there is already a pretty big one in London and it's caused by the REST of the world being able to use their tax free pensions/savings/ill gotten gains to buy London property. Why shouldn't the people who actually live here be treated the same way? As for the small number of people who had managed to save enough to buy a house for cash (only fools give 65 year olds mortgages) which could provide them with an income, they're a drop in the ocean compared to all those middle class pensioners in China (HK & Singapore). The rest of us, with tiny pots (£250,000!!!) to offer the annuity salesman, will get £80K to give the kids and a £12K a year pension. And it's still next to nothing and doesn't include a partner. These deals were crap and the whole thing should be socialised and run by the government.

The market also thinks that Gideon's budget will not cause a house price boom, stop people saving or drive annuity salesmen to the wall (OK, they do think that last bit). Here is a chart of Berkeley Homes (Home builders, primarily in London), Hargreaves Lansdown (SIPP providers) and Just Retirement (annuity salesmen) over the budget.

I'm not saying that's evidence or that it's certainly the way things will go but if you really believe what everyone else has said about this and you're right, the market will be happy to take your money and make you rich.

I have my fingers crossed that social media will come to the rescue. People will organise rent strikes and collective rental agreements and hopefully this foreign money will SLOWLY find better places to be.

I don't think it will john because I think the concept, of a safe haven 'currency' embedded in the bricks and mortar of the capital itself is a luxury for the land owning classes that no government would ever want to end for personal and economic reasons. It will offer one of the biggest transfers of wealth to British property owners that has ever been seen in the history of the UK and create a very large tax turbine.

To rally against it would be a little like Germany rallying against the rising Recommended retail price of a German car. Whilst those that can't afford a car in Germany or house in the UK are missing out, it will always 'seem' wiser to subsidise the locals to buy into the giant Ponzi scheme, rather than allow another country to steal the 'industry' or 'lose profits'.

Also am I not right in saying that in Australia they have a similar pension system already in play and a third of all pensioners decide to plough it back into property ?

If this is the case we'll be worse, no where is the idea that a bricks and mortar 'bird in hand' is worth two in the pensionable bush.

Not sure about Australia but in New Zealand there is no capital gains tax on property. My family back there have their pensions in houses.

A few houses for sale on the same road for nearly eight hundred thousand pounds.

Bargain! Which road?

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