Definitely not a good time to invest in residential property IMO.
Not purely to invest, no. However, an alternative view is that if you need somewhere to live, does it really make sense to be renting and paying off someone else's mortgage just because you think there's going to be a downturn? Renting is money down the pan whichever way you look at it. Paying off a mortgage, even during periods of low or negative equity, is securing your position in the housing market if nothing else.
Paying interest to the bank is money down the pan -- that's the bit people seem to miss. Unless you're making a substantial dent in the capital repayments, which I wouldn't be since it would cost me in the region of £300k to buy something similar to where I rent and thus is well out of my reach, then it's not a sensible approach. Remember that the longer you take to reduce the capital in the early years, the more it costs in total. Hence I'm better off paying rent (which is cheaper than the interest, let alone capital repayment) and investing the difference elsewhere, until such time that a property investment becomes more attractive.
Buying your primary residence is a relatively long term investment, if you can call it that. Is there much difference today between the financial positions of those who bought houses in 1988 and those who bought in, say 1993?
Agreed it's a long term investment, but that doesn't mean you should basically throw away large amounts of cash because it'll be paid off eventually. Those who bought in at the low point, if they played their cards right, will have cleared off the debt much more quickly than those who bought in high. The interest would be lower, thus they could make a bigger dent in the capital early, in turn reducing the interest further, and so on. The problem with many people is that they just reduce the repayments rather than try to clear it as early as possible, but a smaller starting capital value can knock 10 or more years off the repayment schedule, all else being equal, and as a result a huge reduction in total paid (far more than the initial price difference).
I'd say get on the property ladder when it's the right time in your life to settle down and no later. The longer you leave it the harder it'll be.
It's the kind of advice my mum used to always give me back when I stayed with my folks. However I think you have to look at the bigger picture, and I don't want to be a blind pawn in what is effectively an investment game, thus making money for the speculators who played their cards right. I don't believe that you have to own your property -- there are many scenarios where it makes a lot of sense, but others where it's more sensible to rent and invest elsewhere. I'll take each decision as it comes, and at the moment I'm strongly in the latter frame of mind.
I should also add that I'm far from settled, I've lived in this city for going on 4 years now (during that time I've been in 4 different places!) and I'm starting to get itchy feet again. I'll be finishing up at Edinburgh uni soon, and I fancy moving either down south, or to another country depending on what opportunities are available. So renting suits me in many ways, not just monetary.