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Savings and Investments thread

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  • I am going on what our young engineer's say when they are applying for their first house, 4 bed detached houses and have parents giving them hand ups, nothing like I and many others had the chance off...plus 0.00000001% mortgage rates....
    Chippy, you just said your first house was essentially 3x your salary and only 22k.

    A two bed semi where I live will cost about 300k on average. Almost 14 times what you paid. I wonder how many 18-25 year old are earning the equivalent salary of 81k to match up with the opportunity you had.

    Someone hasn't a clue, you got something right at least.
  • edited February 2021
    Flat sharing is out nowadays? Really? Well, if you say so. Big mistake then. My brilliant  Scottish friends back in SW London who are on the monthly Zoom calls, 40 + years after we met,  were originally flatmates, best thing I ever did, moving into that house in Twickenham -at least until the England v Scotland games happened...I'm really very surprised by this assertion. I need to catch up on the status of my nephew and niece in Eltham, both adults now, both living with parents, but niece recently moved out, not sure if she is renting or buying but either way I am sure a friend is involved.

    You ask a very good question about who owns the rented German property, I'll look into that! However it's only half the story. More Germans are buying, but usually to live in what they buy. We actually plan to explore buying an apartment on the German coast, but the market seems very illiquid, people don't want to sell, and one reason why we like that coast is that they don't allow massive speculative building like in Spain.

    You've completely missed the relevance of the Central London buying spree. It's the ripple effect. In the ad agency nobody lived in Kensington or Chelsea in 1992, but they certainly lived in places like Fulham or Putney. When the Russians Chinese and Arabs bought up the whole of K&C what do you think that did to the prices in Putney?..and then down the line to Wimbledon?...and then Surbiton?. Based on your principle of moving out to where you can afford, I guess I'd have ended up in Guildford on that basis. Well, sod that for a life...


    It’s a bit of a myth. BTL in Germany is far bigger than in the UK. Only about 40% of people own the home they live in, UK in comparison is around 65-70%. They have a better rental system in my view with regard both tenants and landlord rights. A lot of BTL owners are accidental - ie inherited (hence why you are seeing property as illiquid), I know quite a few Germans who rent apartments around the outskirts of Munich but own their often late Grand Parents house that they rent somewhere else in Germany. Rents can be quite high in the major cities such as Munich.

    On renting rooms, my experience is it’s quite rare (to buy a house to live in and then rent a room). What’s become more common is a group of friends renting a house together, much like a lot of 2nd/3rd year Uni students do.

    agree to an extent on London, but a much bigger driver is population (of people who want to live in London) I’m guessing you bought in the 80’s when the London population was around 6.5m. Today it’s 9m and still rising. That’s had a far bigger effect on rapidly rising prices than the Russians etc buying up central London. If you look at the last 25 years, London prices broadly have increased 6-7x in the North just about doubled. That’s predominantly supply & demand.

    if you look at the inner/outer London split, 80’s was 2.5m inner 4m outer. Today it’s around 3.5m inner and 5.5m outer.

    if you look away from London, in real terms property is cheaper to buy today than at almost any other time.
  • edited February 2021
    I keep seeing 15% mortgate badge of honour,  I fancy that no one on this thread has ever paid 15% in the UK.
  • .ThreadKiller said:
    I keep seeing 15% mortgate badge of honour,  I fancy that no one on this thread has ever paid 15% in the UK.
    Anyone on a variable in 1979 probably did. In 89 some may have done so as well.
  • edited February 2021
    cafcpolo said:
    Chippy, you just said your first house was essentially 3x your salary and only 22k.

    A two bed semi where I live will cost about 300k on average. Almost 14 times what you paid. I wonder how many 18-25 year old are earning the equivalent salary of 81k to match up with the opportunity you had.

    Someone hasn't a clue, you got something right at least.
    It was but it wasn't 300k in I983 was it....my salary now plus the times you get based on your wages, plus the interest rates, I could afford easily a 600/700k pound house today....so someone hasnt a clue.... your right....or understands...neither does your little like buddy.
  • I keep seeing 15% mortgate badge of honour,  I fancy that no one on this thread has ever paid 15% in the UK.
    As I said earlier, I bought my first property in 1988. A few months after I moved in the Halifax base rate went up......and kept going up for the next couple of years. At that time fixed rates weren't around & everyone was on their lenders SVR and so just had to ride it out. I believe I was paying around 10% when I moved in & indeed it did get to 15% in 1990 before falling back to around 12.5% by 1992. Then we have the ERM fiasco with the  BOE base rate moving from 12% to 15% in one day. 


  • I keep seeing 15% mortgate badge of honour,  I fancy that no one on this thread has ever paid 15% in the UK.
    You didn't have a mortgage then in the mid 90s
  • Rob7Lee said:
    .ThreadKiller said: Anyone on a variable in 1979 probably did. In 89 some may have done so as well.
    Sadly some people are ignorant on these matters.
  • edited February 2021
    It was but it wasn't 300k in I983 was it....my salary now plus the times you get based on your wages, plus the interest rates, I could afford easily a 600/700k pound house today....so someone hasnt a clue.... your right....or understands...neither does your little like buddy.

    I would hazard a guess that you are not in the 18-25 year old age range now! How much would you be earning today doing the job you were doing in 1983 and at the age you were in 1983?

    The maths are right - indeed someone hasn't a clue.
  • TIL that apparently people work harder now cause they have to keep on top of emails in the evening compared to people who worked in the 80’s and 90’s. 
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  • bobmunro said:

    I would hazard a guess that you are not in the 18-25 year old age range now!

    The maths are right - indeed someone hasn't a clue.
    No I am not ....but was when I bought my first house and know how it works and as I have grown up kids know how the situation...indeed someone hasnt a clue..and I am not an alleged accountant...
  • No I am not ....but was when I bought my first house and know how it works and as I have grown up kids know how the situation...indeed someone hasnt a clue..and I am not an alleged accountant...

    Yes I know how it works - I'm about the same age as you and my two sons are also homeowners.

    You missed my edit: How much would you be earning today doing the job you were doing in 1983 and at the age you were in 1983? That's the important bit, not what you actually earn now.

    Who is the alleged accountant? Unless you mean Turf Accountant!

  • You didn't have a mortgage then in the mid 90s
     Mid 90’s you think the interest rate was 15%?
  • bobmunro said:

    I would hazard a guess that you are not in the 18-25 year old age range now! How much would you be earning today doing the job you were doing in 1983 and at the age you were in 1983?

    The maths are right - indeed someone hasn't a clue.
    He said he could easily afford a 600/700k house as an 18-25 year old. Meaning he'd be earning at least a good 80-100k in today's market at that age. I call BS, but if not he's in the absolute minority.
  • When I bought my first house you didn't have new cars, foreign holidays or any lavish items you have today, didn't go out for meals and the Mrs and myself Xmas and birthday presents were items for the house ie wardrobes for the bedroom....try telling any of today's spoilt brats they will have a cheap wedding, no honeymoon,  and go without for a couple of years.

    I am in work tonight and the engineer I am releasing got married two years ago, his wedding cost 32k, suit cost 2k made for measure savile row, horse and cart and everything else. For 18 months he whined about a deposit for the house he lives in...no family paid for it so he said....for one day....could have been a hefty deposit.
  • When I bought my first house you didn't have new cars, foreign holidays or any lavish items you have today, didn't go out for meals and the Mrs and myself Xmas and birthday presents were items for the house ie wardrobes for the bedroom....try telling any of today's spoilt brats they will have a cheap wedding, no honeymoon,  and go without for a couple of years.

    I am in work tonight and the engineer I am releasing got married two years ago, his wedding cost 32k, suit cost 2k made for measure savile row, horse and cart and everything else. For 18 months he whined about a deposit for the house he lives in...no family paid for it so he said....for one day....could have been a hefty deposit.
    Wife’s old colleague was the same. Over 35k on wedding, jugglers etc the lot then moaned they couldn’t raise a deposit for a house. As you say my first car was a Dolomite with 60k on the clock. Nowadays it’s down the local BMW dealer and drive away in a brand new X1 for £300 a month. It’s priorities.
  • Wife’s old colleague was the same. Over 35k on wedding, jugglers etc the lot then moaned they couldn’t raise a deposit for a house. As you say my first car was a Dolomite with 60k on the clock. Nowadays it’s down the local BMW dealer and drive away in a brand new X1 for £300 a month. It’s priorities.
    Indeed mate try telling some of them, my old shift engineer spent £200 every weekend night clubbing in Newbury Thursday to Sunday taxi home, that's 800 quid a month, then whined he couldn't afford his own home.
  • cafcpolo said:
    He said he could easily afford a 600/700k house as an 18-25 year old. Meaning he'd be earning at least a good 80-100k in today's market at that age. I call BS, but if not he's in the absolute minority.
    I said now I could afford that not as an 18-25 year old based on my salary today not then. Glad your not my accountant, but dont need one, like to pay my fair share of tax and not pretend I am a leftie and then advise others how to be tax efficient.
  • I said now I could afford that not as an 18-25 year old based on my salary today not then. Glad your not my accountant, but dont need one, like to pay my fair share of tax and not pretend I am a leftie and then advise others how to be tax efficient.
    So a completely irrelevant point. Nice one. Avoided bobs question I see.
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  • edited February 2021
     Mid 90’s you think the interest rate was 15%?
    It was certainly around that time or maybe earlier...you clearly question that figure and know you are wrong and are now back tracking, no surprise there. Go look it up...if you are that bothered.
  • Bought our first house in 1993 and the mortgage rate was 7.99%. It only ever came down thereafter.
  • I keep seeing 15% mortgate badge of honour,  I fancy that no one on this thread has ever paid 15% in the UK.
    Oh yes back in the 80s I did, well think a I did.

  • Houses still cheap in France, bit of a commute though 

  • Houses still cheap in France, bit of a commute though 
    Not if you live in France!

  • Houses still cheap in France, bit of a commute though 
    Probably quicker on the Eurostar from Paris, than a train from Dartford.
  • bobmunro said:
    Not if you live in France!
    But ok to purchase if you live in UK Bob 😏😏Vouvant in the Vendee is a charming historic lively village, just can’t get out there at the mo though. 
  • But ok to purchase if you live in UK Bob 😏😏Vouvant in the Vendee is a charming historic lively village, just can’t get out there at the mo though. 
    I don’t disagree - some amazing properties at silly prices.
  • edited February 2021
    It was certainly around that time or maybe earlier...you clearly question that figure and know you are wrong and are now back tracking, no surprise there. Go look it up...if you are that bothered.
    When you say “or maybe earlier” it kind of looks like it’s you that’s back tracking.

    Anyway, when I bought my house in 96 the interest rate at the time was was around 6%. Banks wanted your business so there was usually an attractive offer for the first 2-3 years.

    When UK was forced out of the ERM in September 1992, interest rate went from 10% to 15% in one day, trying to defend the pound. The very next day it was straight back to 10%. You can check if you like. 
  • Rob7Lee said:
    .ThreadKiller said: Anyone on a variable in 1979 probably did. In 89 some may have done so as well.
    Sorry, hadn’t seen your reply. Yeah 1979 would have, I just figured they wouldn’t be on this thread as everyone comes across as much younger
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