Snooker Champ Ronnie O'Sullivan Warns Of 'Huge' Housing Crash

'Baby, The Housing Crash Is Coming'
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File photo dated 03/05/2013 of Ronnie O'Sullivan.
PA

Snooker champion Ronnie O'Sullivan has attacked George Osborne's housing policy as "financial terrorism" as he warned that the government was pushing up house prices in a bubble which would lead to a "huge crash".

The Chancellor's Help-to-Buy mortgage guarantee scheme has sparked warnings that it could push up house prices as housebuilding projects struggle to match soaring demand. Nobel Economics Laureate Robert Shiller warned that the UK housing market "looks somewhat like a bubble".

In an extended series of messages on Twitter, O'Sullivan said he would not talk about snooker anymore but focus on "running and financial terrorism".

The retired snooker pro added to his prediction of a house market crash: "Baby it's coming".

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The five times world champion urged homeowners to avoid taking the "bait" of more debt and to "refuse 90 percent mortgages", which he warned would leave people in negative equity.

He wrote: "Don't take the bait, debt is debt don't get your self into more debt...It only plays into the elites hands. They get richer and the poor certainly will get poorer...Don't take the bait..Refuse debt refuse 90 per cent mortgages."

"It will end negative equity making u give your home back to the banks .. Stealing your wealth is the name of the game .. Kerching£££££"

The second stage of Osborne's Help to Buy scheme will offer state-backed 95% mortgages. The Bank of England has already been asked to police the scheme's effect on the housing market as a cautionary measure.

Speaking to the BBC, Osborne said that the scheme was not a "weapon of mass destruction".

He added: "Is this generation that have got homes prepared to say to the next generation: 'You know what, you are never going to be able to afford a home'? I think that would be a very, very bad step for our society."

See also:

Most Expensive UK Property Sales In Q2 2013
19 Wilton Crescent, Westminster: £25m(01 of07)
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66 Townshend Road, Westminster: £24m(02 of07)
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26 Acacia Road, Westminster: £16.5m(03 of07)
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49 Rutland Gate, Kensington and Chelsea: £15m(04 of07)
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2 Trevor Place, Kensington and Chelsea: £14.5m(05 of07)
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Honourable mention: 25 Chesham Place, Kensington and Chelsea: £13.25m(06 of07)
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For being the most expensive apartment sold over the last quarter
It's no surprise London has the most expensive properties...(07 of07)
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According to Adzuna, just 25% of London homes are within budget for first-time buyers on an average local income.London homes prices are nearly 8 times as much as a couple's average salary, according to their estimates.