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Best place for US business folk to retire? Ireland.
Wall Street Journal sister site MarketWatch recommends Ireland as its top spot for a happy retirement.
Your contributions will help us continue to deliver the stories that are important to you
Wall Street Journal sister site MarketWatch recommends Ireland as its top spot for a happy retirement.
Meanwhile, house prices nationally were down 1.8 per cent in Q1 2013, MyHome.ie says.
Residential property prices in Dublin fell by 0.3% last month, while the rest of the country experienced a drop of 2.1%.
The price of residential properties have increased in Dublin but fallen in the rest of Ireland.
The latest CSO figures show the residential market nationwide fell 4.5pc in 2012 – the smallest decline since 2007.
Except in Dublin – where prices increased – newly released CSO figures show.
However CSO data shows house prices in the capital are 55 per cent lower than at the peak of the boom in 2007.
The CSO’s The Residential Property Price Index recorded an overall rise in August.
Our Government appears to be depending on another round of runaway price inflation, writes Aaron McKenna – but where does that leave us?
Kangbashi saw a property price crash last year – but construction is still going on there as much of the city’s luxury properties lie empty.
The slight increase in May could not be followed up as the sector continues to struggle.
How high is Europe’s tallest building? And how many cannabis plants were seized by gardaí last year?
The CSO’s Residential Property Price Index shows prices increasing – but they’re still at only half of their peak value.
Falling house prices and disappointing rental returns mean the taxpayer may not recoup money poured into Nama, a new Government report suggests.
The Minister for Justice has announced a new property regulatory body which will provide more transparency to the property market.
The Central Bank report looked at risks to the Irish economy and noted that Ireland still has a long way to go before the economy gets back to normal.
A study based on the results of the Allsop distressed property auctions show home prices are down by over 60 per cent from peak.
The price of the average residential property fell by 1.7 per cent in December – and lost a sixth of its value in 2011.
Have property prices finally bottomed out? We’d better hope not, writes Michael Taft.
The Government is keeping us hooked on house buying exactly when it should be weaning us off, writes Ronan Lyons.
In tonight’s Fix: Murder accused found dead in cell; baby Jesus comes home in pieces; and North Korea’s no-frills airline in photos…
Economist Ronan Lyons looks at how floods affect our thinking – and wonders if we know enough about the risks.
The average Irish residential property has lost 13.9 per cent of its value in 12 months, with Dublin apartments hit hardest.
The latest CSO data shows that house prices fell by 0.8 per cent in July, leaving the annual drop at 12.5 per cent.
With Ireland at the bottom of the table when it comes to falling property prices, we’re asking if it’s a good time to put down a deposit…
Ireland’s second auction of distressed property has taken place in Dublin – with many properties achieving above the rock-bottom asking prices.
Daft.ie report shows property price fall accelerated in second quarter of 2011. Asking prices nationally fell 5 per cent in three months.
House prices have not risen for almost four years now, according to the latest figures from the CSO.
A report by credit ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has good news and bad news about Irish property prices. But what do you think?
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