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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hend.TR Pac.It | LSE:HPI | London | Ordinary Share | GB0008710799 | ORD 5P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 179.875 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
28/3/2009 11:26 | ...........personall | smelgy | |
25/2/2009 02:48 | Double Island Bottom - finished on 2/23/2009 | energyi | |
05/2/2009 02:53 | HPI-Daily HPI-Weekly HPI-Monthly | energyi | |
03/2/2009 11:09 | Market Watch Market Outlook Hang Seng Index and HSCEI both declined 3.1% to finish at 12,861 and 6,911 respectively. Market turnover decreased to $35.7bn. HSBC (5) closed down 3.8% at $58.50. Hutchison (13), Wharf (4) and Swire Pacific (19) plunged 5.9% to 7.7%. China property and banking stocks underperformed. BOC (3988), CMB (3968), BoComm (3328) and CITIC Bank (998) tumbled 3.9% to 4.7%. China Overseas Land (688), Guangzhou R&F (2777) and Country Garden (2007) fell 5.0% to 6.6%. Angang Steel (347), the worst performing constituent of the HSCEI, lost 7.8%. Zijin Mining (2899) gained 1.2% on rising gold price. Hong Kong¡¦s retail sales value grew 0.8% yoy in December that was better-than-expected | energyi | |
19/4/2007 12:14 | Is the recent london bounce of the dead cat variety? Rgds. | jl202 | |
24/11/2003 13:58 | "Competitive mortgage rates with many special deals for first-time buyers, high employment and income levels and an acute short supply of housing in the UK all points to continuing rises in house prices next year," he said. Looks like an excess of demand to me, mr famous economist ;-) SUPANOVA, absense of FTBs is not a problem to the market as they have been replaced (outmanouvered?) by investment buyers and BTLs. We are at least one more wave away from any negative strength in the market as when the BTLs finally do pull out (if?) and the speculators give up owing to poor returns below mortgage payments, they will be selling into strength as the FTBs return to the market. Once that wave is over, then with market inertia and no further prospect of super normal profits for speculators, then will other BTLs be forced out also. The actual level of any falls will be highly dependent on interest rates - if not exclusively. This market looks like coasting to a hault over the next 2 years and I would agree that ceteris paribus the prospects for a crash in 2004 are less than those of finding elvis on the moon, because rates won't rise. Real Estate won't CRASH. | jl202 | |
04/11/2003 13:28 | Housing bears: take a chill pill | jl202 | |
30/10/2003 13:25 | 30 Oct'03 LONDON (AFX) - One in seven first-time house buyers in the UK may exaggerate their incomes when applying for a self-certification mortgage, raising concerns of a disorderly correction in the housing market, according to research by US investment house Lehman Brothers. The new analysis comes in the wake of the BBC's 'Money Programme', which last night highlighted the risk of first-time buyers overstating their incomes when taking out self-certification mortgages. These types of mortgages allow borrowers to bypass the checks on annual incomes in order to get higher mortgages. "Clearly, this is a worrying trend at a micro level," said Alan Castle, UK economist at Lehman Brothers. "When interest rates rise, these borrowers could be facing huge difficulties in meeting their monthly interest payments." This is becoming more of a concern given the expectation that the Bank of England's rate-setting monetary policy committee is expected to raise interest rates next week by 25 basis points for the first time in 3-1/2 years. Lehman Brothers researched the impact on the macro level, and started by using Datamonitor's estimate of the size of the self-certification market in 2002 of 9.8 bln stg. That compares with overall gross mortgage lending of 116 bln, meaning self-certification accounts for just under 10 pct of the market. Making assumptions on the proportion of self-certification mortgages taken by first-time buyers, and comparing this with the 30 pct of loans taken out by them, Castle reckons one in seven first time buyer mortgages is self-certified. "This is a non-negligible proportion of the market, and although it is impossible to say how many of these applicants have obtained higher lending multiples, it could become an issue of macroeconomic importance," said Castle. "In particular, the role of first-time buyers who are priced out of the market in moderating house price inflation may have been artificially dulled," he said, adding that it adds to the risk of a "disorderly correction" in the housing market some time in the future. pan.pylas@afxnews.co pp/cw | jl202 | |
30/10/2003 09:52 | I see no icebergs (29OCT2003 self cert scandal). | jl202 | |
29/10/2003 12:08 | Its different this time. | jl202 | |
29/10/2003 12:07 | The bear/bull arguement could be summarised thus: to the extent to which they have over-emphasised the volume of speculation in the housing market, so will the bears be wrong, and vice versa. | jl202 |
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