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    Do markets with lowest rental yields (e.g. Syd, Melb) have the most room to fall?

    @lilreb85 That's fair. Do you have an assessment of Sydney north shore property? Super low yields, I am tempted to sell, cash out my equity, and buy some stocks at a good discount.
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    Do markets with lowest rental yields (e.g. Syd, Melb) have the most room to fall?

    @mottotom27 Thanks, that makes a lot of intuitive sense. That also explains why the 'blue ribbon' suburbs that people think are the safest also tend to have the lowest rental yields!
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    Do markets with lowest rental yields (e.g. Syd, Melb) have the most room to fall?

    @philosopher8659 I am not questioning whether houses can go down in price -- I am asking whether those with the lowest rental yield tends to fall the most.
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    Do markets with lowest rental yields (e.g. Syd, Melb) have the most room to fall?

    Sorry if this is an obvious question, but on the stock market, I'm watching that companies with low or zero dividend yields are being sold off massively (e.g. down 50-70%), while those with high dividend yields have only had minor corrections (e.g. down 10-20%). I am wondering if the same...
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