Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleKirstie and Phil self professed property experts make a return to the UK’s TV screens with a more muted version of their long standing delusionally bullish UK property candy floss show titled location, location, location that helped feed the get on the property ladder frenzy of the last few years.
Nadeem_Walayat, The Market Oracle – 20 Nov 2008
Finally, Kirstie has been forced to recognise the fact that house prices can actually fall which follows earlier near religiously opinionated programming that fed on and reinforced the fervour that gripped much of the country as annual house prices roared ahead every month by more than that which people earned in wages, that house prices are a one way bet.
The credit crash is clearly leaving the presenters in an air of frustration that the wood be buyers are in increasing numbers failing to act on their suggestions of buying found properties as people increasingly realise the risks of buying into a crashing UK housing market.
Kirstie is still not getting the message that no matter how much you want house prices to rise, you can’t talk up the market.
But still the impression is that the presenters desperately want the potential buyers to BUY the located properties upon which the programme still hinges, when most are not wanting to once they do the sums away from the glare of the TV cameras, that BUYING does NOT stack up as the analysis of November 2007 showed and concluded that house prices need to rise by more than 2% per annum to beat renting, anything else and buyers lose money.
Whilst Kirstie’s now infamous emotional and angry response against anyone that suggested that house prices could fall on ITV’s London Tonight ‘appears’ to have gone.
Still both Kirstie and Phil are attempting to talk people into lemming like house buying decisions that they will likely regret as the housing bear market progresses, as in fact the most recent program illustrates which showed that had prospective buyers acted on Kirstie’s and Phil’s ’suggestion to buy’, they would have lost £20k ! Let alone many of those that acted during the programming’s boom years that are now probably sitting in negative equity. Full Article





