Soldato
- Joined
- 14 Jul 2005
- Posts
- 9,110
- Location
- Birmingham
If we ignore the risk and look at it purely from a numbers perspective then as mentioned, it isn’t all too different.
What is different is how we have got here and what the impact will be.
It is the low rates that have helped push up prices, because of the maths as you say. For the sake of argument it costs the same monthly amount now as it did 20 years ago.
--> High prices + low rates = low prices + high rates.
However, it is those low rates that have pushed up prices. So if rates rise now, the impact will be far far bigger than the impact of high rates back then.
And its not like buyers now have much of a choice do they. Either accept the prices or don't buy and rent for ever.