Monday, August 11, 2008

Property Pricing Can Become An Obsession For Those Who Are Considering Getting Into The Market

Property pricing can become an obsession for those who are considering getting into the market. While there's no harm in keeping an eye on the current prices as it will always be helpful to get into the market by getting a bargain, it's also important to remember that you intend to get into this game for the longer- term and as a result short- term fluctuations are not so important.



Everybody is looking for a way to try to gage whether prices will go up or down by a percentage point or two over a short period of time when they' re looking to buy. What is vital is that you get into the market at a level that you will be able to find sustainable for the long haul. If you were to buy a house on the very day that a crash happens where you just paid the absolute maximum possible price for the property and within hours the bubble is burst and the price of your property is halved. Let's take a quite extreme example of this. Most people would consider this to be an absolute disaster and in a sense they would be correct but let's take this scenario and look at it from another side to get from point of view. If you bought your house in such a way that you will be able to keep up the repayments even if you' re dealing in a scenario of negative equity then you will be able to keep the house. Okay, so you just paid far too much but still one simple truth remains.


So, if you can continue to make the repayments even though you bought in the worst possible market conditions over the longer- term you would still be proved right. The whole secret of any property investment is to always keep the figures in line, not overextend yourself and then you will be able to stay in the market no matter what happens in the short- term even if you bought a house in this worst possible case scenario. What we have outlined here is an extreme scenario but at the same time some people have been unlucky enough to find themselves in this type of situation. Once you are stable enough to keep the house then 25 or 30 years later you will still be far ahead of the game. If you follow this one golden rule then essentially the market can do whatever it likes and can fluctuate in whatever fashion without it having any long- term detrimental effect on your investment as there is virtually nothing surer than that the market will eventually go back up and if you have been able to afford to stay in the game in the meantime then you will be a winner no matter what. The number one most important factor in buying property is buying what you can afford and keeping your mortgage repayments at a level that you will be able to afford to keep up.


By keeping this in mind, you can almost invariably be successful in the long- term which should be the main goal in the first place.

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