Reserve Bank of Australia targets property ‘bubble’ speculators…

 

The RBA is more wary of investors entering the property market, writes Matthew Bell.

The comments of the Reserve Bank governor, Glenn Stevens, in television interviews last week concentrated on dampening potential enthusiasm for speculation in a rapidly rising housing market.

Property prices have risen by more than 10 per cent in the past year, driven largely by population growth that continues to increase the gap between housing demand and supply.

The danger is that potential home buyers start entering the market simply to get a leveraged investment expecting quick gains.

This speculation was a feature of the US housing market before the global financial crisis, with skyrocketing prices and oversupply of properties being key drivers of the subsequent crash in prices of more than 30 per cent.

One of Stevens’ main points was that investing in property wasn’t an exercise without risks, and dangers awaited those who thought that there were easy profits to be made.

With his hand on the interest rate lever, Stevens should know better than most.

This warning by the RBA contrasts with the relatively low level of risk that it associates with those who entered the market in the past year, particularly the significant number of first home buyers.

In its twice-yearly Financial Stability Review released last month, the RBA spends a lot of time analyzing the likelihood of any material change in home owners’ ability to repay their mortgage debt.

The thing to note is that the rate of arrears in Australia remains very low by world standards and hasn’t changed much in the past year.

By loan value, only 0.6 per cent of loans were outstanding, compared with almost 8 per cent in the US and more than 2 per cent in Britain.

But what about all those first home buyers who some claim borrowed too much when rates were low and won’t be able to afford the repayments when rates rise?

Tightening underwriting standards and falling numbers of first home buyers as last year came to an end have meant that only 17 per cent of new owner-occupied housing loans have a loan-to-value ratio of more than 90 per cent, down from 27 per cent a year ago.

The report also says that “partial credit bureau data suggest that the creditworthiness of recent first home buyers has been broadly similar to earlier cohorts of first time borrowers”. That is, last year’s first home buyers are as unlikely to default as those before them.

This is not particularly surprising when you think about it. Many first home buyers last year had been kept out of the market for the previous five years because they couldn’t afford it.

When they finally entered the market, they were taking out bigger loans, but they had bigger families to house and bigger incomes to pay their mortgages.

The RBA is clearly more concerned with the risk associated with speculators entering the property market this year than with the risk of the first home buyers who took advantage of low rates and the First Home Owners Boost to enter the market in 2008 and last year.

Matthew Bell is a senior economist at Australian Property Monitors.

smh.com.au

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Reserve Bank of Australia – Surging house prices’ pressuring rate move

Housing prices have climbed almost 13 per cent nationally to a median price of $455,000 putting pressure on the RBA

SURGING property prices have increased the pressure on the Reserve Bank to lift the official interest rate when it meets tomorrow.

While economists are split on the chances of an April rate rise, the numbers tipping a rise increased last week amid new data showing strong property price growth and RBA Governor Glenn Stevens warning about housing values in a surprise television interview.

A report released last week by RP Data and Rismark International found auction clearance rates have jumped by up to 70 per cent in the past 12 months, and dwelling values nationally have climbed 12.7 per cent over the same period to a median price of $455,000.

RP Data national research director Tim Lawless said the strong growth would give the RBA food for thought tomorrow.

“A further rate rise may be aimed at taking some of this heat out of the market,” he said.

“However, the strong gains need to be viewed in balance as the Reserve will also be factoring the slow retail market and sluggish dwelling approvals into their thinking.”

AMP Capital Investors chief economist Shane Oliver said tomorrow’s RBA decision would be a “very close call” but he expected a rate rise of 0.25 of a percentage point.

“RBA Governor Glenn Stevens’ surprise appearance of TV warning of the dangers of home buyers borrowing too much clearly indicates that the RBA is very concerned about the continuing surge in house prices, and the risk that it might turn into an unsustainable bubble,” Dr Oliver said.

“Strong house price gains are adding to pressure for the RBA to lift rates again,” he said.

Smartline Personal Mortgage Advisers said its average loan size had jumped about 30 per cent in the past 12 months.

Smartline managing director Chris Acret said a chronic lack of property across Australia was pushing up property prices and making it tough for many to enter the market.

“It’s increasingly becoming a market of the haves and the have nots,” he said.

“While we have seen strong investor activity in the past two months, we know that there are many people struggling to be able to buy a home, either due to availability or affordability.”

An AAP survey of 15 economists late last week found nine of them expect the RBA to lift the rate tomorrow by 0.25 of a percentage point, which would increase the repayments on a $300,000 mortgage by $45 a month. Six economists expect no move this month.

CommSec chief economist Craig James said the annual growth rate in house prices was at a 25-month high, but he did not expect an upwards move from the RBA tomorrow.

“Given the weakness in consumer spending and building approvals, the Reserve Bank should not rush the rate rise, especially given that the inflation environment remains very weak,” he said

Rising house prices

In Sydney, the median house price climbed 3.9 per cent in the three months to February, and 12.8 per cent over the year to $610,000, according to the RP Data-Rismark Hedonic Home Value Index.  The median unit price rose 3.6 per cent in the quarter to $435,000 and is up 11.1 per cent year on year.

In Melbourne, the median house price climbed 5.1 per cent in the three months to February, and 19 per cent over the year to $515,000.  The median unit price rose 6.5 per cent in the quarter to $421,000 and is up 20.1 per cent year on year.

In Brisbane, the median house price climbed 0.1 per cent in the three months to February, and 6.1 per cent over the year to $458,000, while unit prices rose 2.2 per cent in the quarter to $379,000 and is up 8.2 per cent year on year.

In Adelaide, the median house price climbed 2.7 per cent in the three months to February, and 9.1 per cent over the year to $405,000.  Unit prices rose 1.9 per cent in the quarter to $325,000 and is up 9.3 per cent year on year.

In Hobart, the median house price is now $346,500 and is up 7.4 per cent for the year to January 31, and the median unit price is up 11.1 per cent year on year to $270,000.

news.com.au

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Australia: Melbourne’s house price jump leads the nation…

Melbourne house prices have lead the nation the latest RP Data – Rismark house price index shows

MELBOURNE’S house prices have outperformed every city in Australia, new benchmark real estate figures show.  

According to RP Data-Rismark’s Australian housing report, released yesterday, in the three months to the end of February, Melbourne’s property prices grew 5.4 per cent.

In the same quarter property in Darwin increased 4.2 per cent, the Sydney market was up 3.8 per cent and Adelaide rose 2.5 per cent.

Over the year to February, Melbourne’s prices were up an impressive 19.9 per cent.

The Reserve Bank uses the data when deciding whether to raise, stay or lower interest rates.

Rismark’s chief executive, Christopher Joye, said Melbourne’s booming market was on the back of strong population growth.

“Melbourne is probably the single most attractive destination for migrants coming into this country,” Mr Joye said.

Commonwealth Bank chief economist Craig James echoed Mr Joye’s response and said: “Growth always comes down to an imbalance of supply and demand.

“We are seeing the strongest population growth in Victoria since the 1960s,” Mr James said.

“Effectively, a lot of people are running into the state from overseas or interstate but developers are not keeping up.”

While there may be impressive growth in Melbourne and other major cities, the data showed the rest of the state was not keeping up.

“The rest of Victoria’s data has only appreciated 9.9 per cent — that is half the rate of the city house measures,” Mr Joye said.

Melbourne’s market has been a hotly debated topic for the past year as economists, real estate agents, experts and consumers argue whether the city’s property market is in a highly stressed bubble.

Mr Joye said this was not the case and the RBA was doing everything in its power to steer the national property market to safety.

“What the RBA is worried about is the risk of a major housing boom feeding into a mortgage growth, and then mortgage growth in turn feeding back into prices where you get a bubble.

“They categorically don’t believe there is a bubble right now,” Mr Joye said.

By Antonia Magee From: Herald Sun

Property Investment in Australia

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Australia: Underbuild could see affordability crisis deepen – Queensland is only building one new home for every 4.3 new residents

 

The shortfall, revealed in a report by Access Economics yesterday, came after the Australian Bureau of Statistics confirmed Queensland was the second fast growing state in Australia last year, having attracted more than 58,000 overseas migrants and 16,700 migrants.

Access Economics director Chris Richardson said the implication for housing affordability in the Sunshine State was “serious”.

According to Mr Richardson, the state was shy more than 17,500 dwellings.

“A clash between the strength of population demand for housing and the worsening lack of supply of housing is building rapidly,” he said.

Meanwhile, the median house price in Brisbane surged past $500,000 for the first time in the December quarter.

Mr Richardson said this result reflected the traditional equation of supply and demand.

Ironically, property inflation was tipped as the catalyst, which could halt population growth in its tracks.

Chief among the reasons for the undersupply, Mr Richardson said, was the limited release of land on the urban fringe in South-East Queensland for new `greenfield sites’ and the limited finance obtainable by Queensland developers in the wake of the global credit crunch.

The report by Access Economics, for the Urban Development Institute of Australia, showed commercial lending for residential development in Queensland plunged 60 per cent in the past two years, compared to the national decline of 10 per cent.

That coincided with the collapse of numerous second-tier lending firms, primarily based on the Gold Coast, and also Suncorp’s withdrawal from the commercial lending market.

Yet property analyst Michael Matusik has questioned figures pointing to an undersupply in Queensland’s residential property market.

“Circumstances have changed in the last six months to suggest that maybe we are, firstly already building enough dwellings to cater for demand, and that we might even be heading for an overbuild if current trends continue,” Mr Matusik said.

He said the record number of interstate migrants to Queensland had retained their cultural living habits, which did not demand thousands more detached dwellings.

“Nine out of ten new migrants live with friends and relatives upon arrival. Most rent, on average for three years thereafter, before eventually buying,” Mr Matusik said.

“Overseas migrants often live in large household arrangements, with their typical household size being a full person more than the Australian average.

“This fact might, in part, explain why the average household size is starting to rise again across many parts of the country. Net overseas migration is not the big multiplier many of our learned friends make it out to be.”

Indeed, the Access Economics report noted an unusually high increase in the average number of people living under one roof in Queensland in the past three years.

But it also pointed to a return to more one person households, as overseas migration levels “self-corrected” in the coming five years.

“As the ABS has noted, lone person households are projected to increase particularly quickly in Queensland,” the report says.

If Queensland simply wanted to keep the number of people per household constant – at the current level 2.6 people per household – then it would need to have housing starts some 65 per cent higher than they were over the past year, Mr Richardson said.

He said the social implications of the housing shortfall would include a rise in the number of multi-generational households, whereby Generation Y stayed at home until the age of 26, before housing their retired baby boomer parents in later years.

“Higher house prices will make it difficult for younger Queenslanders to afford to buy their own home, pushing up the average number of people per household even further over time,” Mr Richardson said.

He said the challenge was for more medium density development, which was affordable.

Solutions canvassed in the Access Economics report were welcomed by developers in Brisbane yesterday, who have long led calls for reduced infrastructure charges and land taxes.

UDIA Queensland president Warren Harris said infrastructure charges typically accounted for 34 per cent of residential development costs.

“This cost is passed onto the buyer and it has a direct impact on affordability,” Mr Harris said.

The report suggested the government foot the bill for improved infrastructure in the outer, greenfield suburbs.

“There is less housing an demand in area where there is a lack of efficient transport, employment opportunities and access to other social services and community infrastructure,” the report says.

“This in turn means a lack of incentive for developers to convert land in those areas into housing even if there is sufficient land release.”

In order to achieve a happy medium, Mr Harris called for a development taskforce to be established in Queensland.

“This problem is so dire and so immediate we need an immediate response, therefore we are calling for an industry recovery taskforce to be established,” he said.

“We need members from state government, local government, and the development industry, and if necessary federal government, all talking and negotiating on proper outcomes for the housing industry.”

MARISSA CALLIGEROS brisbanetimes.com.au

Property Investment in Australia

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Reserve Bank of Australia… beware housing bubble trouble

 

Reserve Bank is supporting moves by retail lenders to tighten credit standards in the home loan market, warning that surging property prices might still lead to a speculative bubble.

Assistant governor Philip Lowe yesterday told a business forum in Sydney that recent economic data showing employment growth and rising house prices had given the RBA confidence that the economy was now in “a reasonably solid upswing”.

While acknowledging there were signs that the property market might cool in the coming months, he cautioned banks against relaxing loan-to-value ratios and other lending rules.

“On the financing side, we are currently not seeing the type of

financial developments that caused concern in 2002 and 2003 when maximum loan-to-value ratios were being raised,” he said.

“This is good news, as it would obviously be unhelpful if a speculative cycle were to emerge on the back of the recent strength in housing prices.

“This is an area that lenders and current prospective home owners will need to watch carefully over the months ahead.”

The country’s largest lenders — Westpac and Commonwealth Bank — this year have increased the minimum deposits required by home loan applicants on concerns that more property buyers will find it difficult to service debt in a rising rate environment.

Dr Lowe said the RBA expected the Australian economy to continue growing strongly this year on the back of a recovery in business investment, particularly in the resources sector.

“Recently, the spot prices of iron ore and coal have risen, and the prices that exporters will receive over the next year look likely to be substantially higher than those received over the past year,” he said.

“As a result, a significant rise in the terms of trade is expected over the year ahead.”

Dr Lowe’s cautiously upbeat outlook came as the RBA gave the Australian banking system a near-clean bill of health in its latest financial stability review.

Data collated by the review appears to contradict recent suggestions from mortgage experts that home borrowers are stretching to meet loan repayments.

As at the end of December, the RBA found that about half of all owner-occupiers were “ahead of schedule” on loan repayments.

However, the review highlighted that continuing weakness in the commercial property market had been a driver of non-performing loans in the major banks’ business lending books.

“There has been a more significant deterioration in the quality of banks’ business loan portfolios, particularly for commercial property, and this remains an area to watch closely in the period ahead,” the RBA said in the review.

“Nonetheless, recent indications are that banks’ overall loan losses may have peaked and that profits have again begun to increase.”

The review noted that overall debt-to-equity ratios were falling among listed property trusts but that the average gearing ratio of 80 per cent was still well above the long run average of about 60 per cent.

heraldsun.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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The RBA lifts the lid on housing debt …

In contrast to what you might be led to believe if you listen to media commentators, the RBA clearly thinks that the biggest risks to Australia’s financial system lie not in housing, which the extraordinarily detailed analysis they have released today shows has relatively low risks, but with the commercial property and business lending sectors. This is something that I have consistently hammered on about here.  

You can read this position verbatim in the RBA’s bi-annual Financial Stability Review (FSR), which they published today. (For the avoidance of any further doubt, I have also confirmed this directly with the RBA itself.) To quote the FSR:  

“The Australian financial system remained resilient through the crisis period and, in aggregate, banks experienced only a relatively shallow downturn in underlying profits. The quality of banks’ housing loan portfolios has proven to be very high by international standards… There has been a more significant deterioration in the quality of banks’ business loan portfolios, particularly for commercial property, and this remains an area to watch closely in the period ahead.”  

Before we return to the RBA’s analysis, it is worthwhile summarising the latest ABS population estimates for the 12 months to September 2009. Population growth remains remarkably strong at a developed-world beating 2.1 per cent per annum. Importantly, that is vastly higher than the 1.2 per cent per annum growth assumed by the federal government’s intergenerational report (IGR), which I have denoted in the first chart here with a dotted pink line. 

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


The next chart shows the latest ABS estimates for net overseas migration. The current annual pace is 297,300 persons. In contrast, the IGR assumes that net overseas migration only runs at a flat 180,000 persons per annum between 2012 and 2050. I have illustrated the IGR forecast via the red star. You judge whether that sounds realistic given an ageing population and shrinking skilled labour force.
 

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


Now the RBA today has lavished us with some incredibly valuable analysis in its semi-annual Financial Stability Review, which is produced by Dr Luci Ellis’s team.  

The first chart below shows Australia’s non-performing housing loans (blue line) in comparison to the US, UK, Spain, and Canada. Australia’s non-performing loans represent about 0.6 per cent of the total compared to nearly 8 per cent in the US. For the analysts out there, a loan is non-performing if it is either past-due (90+ days in arrears and well-collateralised) or impaired (in arrears or otherwise doubtful, and not well-collateralised) based on a definition provided by the RBA. 

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


The FSR takes a close look at major bank profitability as defined by ‘return on equity’ (RoE). And this information provides plenty of ammunition for the big bank sceptics. According to the RBA’s analysis, the major banks’ RoEs are forecast in 2010 to be near all-time highs since 1986 (see first panel in chart below).
 

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


The FSR also reiterates a theme raised frequently here that the Australian banks’ lack of offshore exposures and focus on domestic housing helped insulate them from the GFC. To quote:  

“The overall effect of offshore lending on Australian banks’ total [non performing assets] has been relatively small because overseas exposures only account for around one quarter of their assets. In contrast to many overseas banks, the major Australian banks did not aggressively push beyond traditional geographical or product markets over recent years to seek out higher-yielding, but higher-risk, assets. In New Zealand and the United Kingdom – which together account for about two thirds of total foreign exposures – the major banks’ balance sheets also contain a significant share of lending to the traditionally less risky household sector, albeit less than for their domestic operations. Reflecting their focus on domestic lending, most of the foreign claims of the Australian banks represent their local banking operations in New Zealand and the United Kingdom.”  

The FSR goes on to offer up a bunch of fantastic information on the housing market. First, it shows us that household debt is growing at low rates compared to the recent past (see the left hand side panel of the chart below). In particular, the RBA comments:  

“Total outstanding household debt has been growing at a much slower pace than in the previous decade.”  

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


Next the FSR demonstrates that while household gearing has increased over time, leverage, according to the RBA, is very low at less than 30 per cent of assets (confirming what I have said here recently). Expanding on this subject, the RBA observes:  

“[A]lthough the Australian household sector as a whole has become more indebted, it remains the case that there is only a small share of very highly geared borrowers.”  

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


The FSR then proceeds to drill into household debt levels in much finer detail. In the next chart, the FSR tells us that in 2008 around half of all home owners had zero mortgage debt. Only 36 per cent of all households were indebted owner-occupiers (refer to the left hand side). And those borrowers ‘behind schedule’ represent just 0.6 per cent of all loans by value.
 

  

click the image to enlarge  

  


The FSR concludes its housing analysis by asking the question, What percentage of all borrowers have low equity and high repayments (defined as more than 50 per cent of disposable incomes)? They find:  

“In general, households appear well placed to meet their debt repayments. Based on the most recent HILDA Survey data, in late 2008 – a period when housing loan interest rates were at their highest in more than a decade – around 2 per cent of households with owner-occupier mortgages fulfilled two criteria indicating possible increased vulnerability: they spent more than 50 per cent of their disposable incomes on mortgage repayments; and they had an LVR of 90 per cent or more.”  

These are sobering statistics for those trying to peddle the ‘bubble’ moniker. One finds this most frequently deployed by those who do not have the data and/or analytical equipment to understand the market.  

Christopher Joye writes an economics, finance and real estate blog for Business Spectator. His ‘after-hours’ blog can be found here. businessspectator.com.au 

  

Property Investment News – Australia  

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Australia: Home ownership – Many Australians will do almost anything to purchase a home…

 

At any cost: the seduction of home ownership

There is a big seduction that’s very powerful in this country of having your own home.”

Australians are spending an ever-increasing amount on homes, seduced, to borrow psychologist Elisabeth Wilson-Evered’s term, by the dream of ownership.

Indeed, there is sometimes a “sense of failure” if a couple is still renting when they marry or have children, said Professor Wilson-Evered, director of research at Relationship Australia Queensland. The home represents security and comes to embody a family’s very identity, even achievement.

Ironically, Australians are engaging in increasingly risky behaviour to gain that security as they face the uncertainty that comes from a combination of the global economic crisis, labour market reforms and a widening gap between rich and poor.

“Many Australians will do almost anything to purchase a home,” said Sydney University anthropologist Stephen Juan. “They will often take out loans far beyond their ability to repay them.”

Regardless of their – or the world’s – financial position, Australians “reason that they might as well ‘go for it’ now because it may be their only chance,” Dr Juan said. “Or if another chance comes along tomorrow it will not be as good as today’s.”

That notion is borne out in official data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics that show the average loan size for first-home buyers was $285,000 in January. That is more than a third higher than it was five years ago. But over the same timeframe, full-time weekly earnings rose only 21 per cent to $1226, according to ABS figures.

That shows a lag between earnings and mortgage costs, a growing differential between cash coming in to the average household, and cash going out.

Add to that the fact that home prices are expected to increase between 8 and 12 per cent this year after jumping 13.6 per cent in 2009, and the “get in now or miss out” urgency becomes more apparent.

At the same time, mortgage rates are also on the rise, with about $200 a month added to the cost of an average $300,000, 25-year loan since the Reserve Bank’s rate-rise cycle began in October. If credit market predictions are right, the average mortgage will be another $200 more expensive by the end of the year. And if banks move above and beyond official rates – as Westpac hinted this morning – it could be even worse.

Banks of course check to ensure a would-be borrower can afford to repay a loan but it is the unexpecteds that see people wind up with unmanageable levels of debt.

“Customers who default on their loans usually experience an unexpected change in their circumstances such as illness, family breakdown or job loss,” the Australian Bankers’ Association said, noting banks often work with financially stressed customers to find short-term solutions to their difficulties.

“Home-ownership is an aspiration of many Australians and we have one of the highest rates of home-ownership in the world,” chief executive Steven Münchenberg said. “Banks are responsible lenders – it doesn’t make business sense for a bank to make a loan to a customer who cannot afford to repay.”

In most cases, families and individuals will cling to their home even when the mortgage stress reaches breaking point, selling it only as a last resort.

In February, according Fujitsu Australia, there were 218,700 Australian households at risk of having to sell, refinance or lose their homes, up 2 per cent on a month earlier.

And it all comes down to what Fujitsu Australia industry director Martin North sees as the “burning desire” of Australians to “to own real estate at any cost”.

CHRIS ZAPPONE czappone@fairfax.com.au BusinessDay smh.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Australia’s property bubble is alive and well… but for how long?

 

Australia’s property bubble: it’s here

It’s official: 60 per cent of investors believe Australia has a property bubble. A confluence of housing shortages, low interest rates, speculative fervour and last year’s move by the Rudd Government to relax foreign ownership rules on real estate have turbo-charged house prices.

But as John Maynard Keynes famously said: “A market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent,” and those looking for an imminent correction will find little evidence for it in investor attitudes.

In the latest Investor Pulse survey, conducted jointly by BusinessDay and marketing research group Colmar Brunton, there is no indication that investor appetite for property will slow down any time soon.

When asked if it was a good time to buy an investment property, 67 per cent agreed that it was because the supply shortage would support rental and price yields. Another 21 per cent thought prices would stagnate and only 12 per cent believed that prices would fall.

On the future of the boom, 32 per cent could see it running another year, 44 per cent for two or more years, and 7 per cent forever. Contrary to recent years, respondents ranked Sydney as the strongest property market in the current cycle, followed by Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Canberra, Darwin and Hobart.

This is all scary stuff.  Investors played a key role in expanding the property bubble through the late 90s. In 1990 investment loans represented 16 per cent of Australian mortgages at $13 billion. By 2008 that figure had ballooned 2400 per cent to $310 billion, or 31 per cent of total mortgages. Investor attitudes matter.

Despite 71 per cent of investors hypothetically believing there could be a property crash, the more common attitude is that other factors will keep the momentum going. They rank the following factors in order of importance: housing shortages; low interest rates; foreign purchases of Australian property; speculative fervour; negative gearing and moral hazard.

The survey revealed, however, that moral hazard may be much larger than investors themselves admit, with 42 per cent expecting the Rudd Government to introduce another round of first home buyer grants if the current boom shows signs of ending.

The increase in foreign purchases also cannot be under estimated, following the decision last March by the federal government to relax its rules on property ownership. This abolished mandatory reporting of such acquisitions in a bid to ”enhance flexibility in the market”.

Before the change, foreign investment in Australian residential property had already started increasing, up 33 per cent to $20.4 billion. It is not known what the figures stand at in 2010 but there are suggestions that more than 30 per cent of homes auctioned are purchased by foreign speculators. If this is the case, it will dramatically add to the property bubble.

It is a potential political time bomb. Numerous readers have written in complaining that they are being priced out of the market by overseas bidders.

One Investor Pulse reader wrote recently: “It would explain the highly overpriced market and the reason why local wages are not enough to purchase the average house. To rely on high immigration to keep the economy temporarily out of trouble is one thing, but allowing this foreign speculation to keep Australians out of their own market should be opposed with urgency.”

Another Investor Pulse reader wrote: “So much for Rudd’s ‘working families’. Australians should get priority over foreign investors for what limited housing we have. How can Australians compete when Chinese borrow at home at 1 per cent? The Australian property market is strong and doesn’t need to be propped up. The Government should act now to stop this misguided and UN-Australian policy. Shame on you, Mr Rudd, for selling out on Working Families.”

Investors are divided on possible solutions to the outsized price rises. A majority, 54 per cent, are against interest rate rises. When it comes to government policy, investors ranked cutting stamp duty as their best solution, just ahead of building more public housing and re-limiting foreign investment.

Cutting immigration and negative gearing ranked lower. Another solution was also clear in the fact that 52 per cent of investors admitted they would reconsider the value of an investment property if the government reversed the 1999 capital gains tax cuts.

Investors clearly acknowledged the need for government intervention with 91 per cent seeing no solution coming from the private sector. Half reckoned banks will not lend to developers because their exposure to mortgages is already too high. Most of the other half agreed rather with the statement that the banks see the risk in overvalued prices and want to keep the market tight.

There was little sympathy for younger Australians with 55 per cent of investors agreeing first-home buyers were best off saving a deposit to get into the property market and 24 per cent suggesting the young could buy on the city fringe.

Another 27 per cent of surveyed investors already owned an investment property and 16 per cent were are seriously considering buying one.

smh.com.au ADELE FERGUSON aferguson@fairfax.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Red-hot Melbourne property market starts to glow white…

MELBOURNE’S property market is shaping up to record its strongest pre-Easter results due to insatiable demand.

Of the weekend’s 884 auctions, 623 properties were sold, generating a clearance rate of 87 per cent when the 145 properties sold before auction are taken into account.

Buxton Carnegie’s Paul Podbury said a three-bedroom house on 250 square metres at 321 Alma Road, Caulfield North, sold for $815,000, well above its $695,000 reserve.

”It is staggering that for a house that hasn’t been touched in the 42 years since it was built, people are paying upwards of $800,000.

”Given the numbers we’re getting at our auctions and also the number of people putting their hands up, it would seem as though demand is still very, very strong,” he said.

Frank Valentic, of Advantage Property Consulting, said high prices were concerning – a two-bedroom Elwood apartment at 3/5 Beach Avenue, bought four years ago for $425,000, sold at auction for $737,000. ”Salaries aren’t going up at that rate, so it’s going to be harder and harder for people to get in the market,” he said.

Michael Szulc, of Cayzer Real Estate, said a double-fronted brick home at 31 Langridge Street, Middle Park, sold for $1.82 million, several hundred thousand dollars above reserve.

”Despite murmurs that the market is softening, there were no signs of that at all this weekend – the market’s red hot.”

In Kew, Noel Jones chairman Adrian Jones said six bidders competed for 224 Cotham Road, which sold for $1.7 million, after being quoted between $1.3 million and $1.4 million.

JPP buyer advocate Catherine Cashmore said sale prices were starting to fall within the expected ranges. She said 83A Shamrock Street, Brunswick, which sold for $695,000, was quoted at between $550,000 and $600,000, with comparable sales placing it in the high $600,000s.

A property sold by Hocking Stuart’s David Wood at 45 Wright Street, Middle Park, went for $1.91 million, above a reserve of $1.8 million.

”I don’t think the market’s easing at all. There’s probably a little hiatus coming with the grand prix next weekend and then Easter, so what’s been on offer in the last little while will probably be it for the next month or so,” Mr Wood said.

More than 80 per cent of the 155 properties in the $1 million-plus bracket were sold.

Almost 1080 auctions will be held in the coming week.

Source: NATALIE PUCHALSKI  The Age

Property Investment News – Australia

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House price rises pose dilemma for RBA: report

 

Australia’s affordable housing crisis may worsen if efforts by the Reserve Bank to choke off rising prices prompt home builders to shelve plans for new construction, an economic research group said today.

Economics forecaster BIS Shrapnel said today rising house prices may spur the RBA to lift interest rates further to prevent an inflation break-out, a move that would deter investment in new residential.

“The Reserve Bank faces a dilemma,” said BIS Shrapnel. “It is keen to head off the emergence of a potentially damaging housing asset bubble, but doesn’t want to undermine the recovery in dwelling construction.”

The central bank lifted interest rates by 25 basis points to 4 per cent this month, its fourth increase since October as economic growth accelerated. This month’s decision was prompted in part because “house prices had gained significant momentum and were continuing to rise strongly for all but the bottom segment of the market,” the RBA said, according to minutes accompanying this month’s decision.

The report, delivered by BIS Shrapnel chief economist Dr Frank Gelber to its Business Forecasting Conference in Melbourne, predicts private investment in dwellings to expand by 1.8 per cent this year, not enough to make up for the 1.9 per cent contraction in 2009 during the global financial crisis.

The forecaster said the RBA’s recent rate rises were a “warning shot to households not to get too comfortable with interest rates at historically low levels.”

The downside of more costly finance, though, is that less investment money may flow into housing construction -  money that’s crucial to relieving an estimated 60,000 unit shortfall this year alone.

“There is now the risk that housing recovery will be undermined before it has the chance to gain momentum,” the report said.

Also, rising house prices and interest rates erode affordability “to the extent that households will struggle to service the debt”.

The BIS report tipped the economy to grow 2.8 per cent this year doubling, 2009’s 1.3 per cent pace.

On the interest rates front, markets currently place a 44 per cent chance of a 25 basis point rate hike in April, and predict interest rates will be at 5.25 per cent within a year, according to Credit Suisse.

CHRIS ZAPPONE czappone@fairfax.com.au smh.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Sydney property prices are expected to double within the decade

  • Home prices tipped to double in Sydney
  • Perth, Brisbane predicted to boom
  • Thousands will be locked out of market

UP TO half of Sydney homeowners are set to become property millionaires, with house prices predicted to double in the next decade.

Figures prepared exclusively for The Sunday Telegraph by Australian Property Monitors (APM) show Sydney’s median property price is on target to reach $1.2 million, averaging 7.6 per cent growth per annum.

It’s good news for those already in the market but economists say housing affordability is at a crisis, blaming both federal and state governments for failing to act. They warn the Australian dream of home ownership is ending.

Suburbs as diverse as Kellyville, Campsie and Forestville are all predicted to have a median above $1 million. Affordable outer-western suburbs such as Emerton and Blackett – both ranked in the top 10 for potential growth – could all be worth more than $600,000 by December, 2019.

In high-end areas such as Watsons Bay and Palm Beach, homes are predicted to cost more than $8 million. Apartments will make solid gains across most suburbs.

Some inner-west areas, however, are among the lower performers. Coastal properties, hit hardest in the global financial crisis, could also make good returns over the next decade fuelled by baby boomers making sea changes.

John Symond from Aussie Home Loans said future generations would have little hope of getting into the market if such heights are attained.

“Young people should try to buy now while it’s still reasonably affordable. They shouldn’t over-commit themselves and will need to hold on to the property long term.”

While Mr Symond said he doubted property would rise as much as predicted in the report, he said “if it gets to half of that it’s still scary”.

APM economist Matthew Bell said Sydney house prices have grown on average seven to eight per cent per annum over the past 20 years and this was set to continue.

“We are a relatively affluent country with very good long-term prospects in terms of resources boom and population growth – I just can’t see us underperforming,” Mr Bell said. “When I was young, a million dollars was a lot of money – now it’s less money and that is just the power of inflation.”

While Sydney prices are strong, it may not make the same gains as other cities with stronger projected population numbers.

Perth is expected to make strongest gains over the decade with the median house price tipped to jump 12.3 per cent, followed by Brisbane (11.6 per cent) and Melbourne (10 per cent).

“If I had to invest somewhere in Australia it would be Perth followed by Brisbane because you have strong incomes, a resources boom and strong population growth,” Mr Bell said.

Wages in NSW are currently growing at 5.4 per cent per annum, according to APM, with experts warning this will not be enough to keep up with rising house prices.

“If all that income growth occurs, say in resource sector-related jobs, then large sections of the population will struggle to afford property in the future,” Mr Bell said.

The APM data follows a housing affordability report that found if construction trends continue, Australia will face a housing shortfall of 466,000 homes by 2020. Sydney will need an extra 13,000 homes, the Housing Industry Association said.

HIA chief executive Graham Wolfe said the forecasts risk driving essential service workers out of the city. Governments needed to cut taxes and levies on land and new homes, more land needed to be released and existing properties should be rezoned.

“It’s bad news for housing affordability and it’s therefore correspondingly bad news for people looking to buy, and that’s our sons and daughters,” Mr Wolfe said. “What we don’t want to do is chase our essential service workforce out of the city. With prices escalating at that rate, it will make it very difficult.”

Mr Wolfe said too many established suburbs had large blocks of land with a single weatherboard house on site. And even if more property was released, governments and councils needed to cut taxes, levies and fees that can add up to $170,000 of the cost of a new house-and-land package.

CommSec chief economist Craig James said it was not all bad for aspiring homeowners. Disposable incomes have been rising by around 7.4 per cent a year in line with Sydney’s forecast average property price growth of seven per cent a year to 2020.

Mr James said while the cost of utilities will rise, other services such as communication and household appliances are likely to fall.

“It’s likely we’ll see the cost of communication, household appliances, even travel become cheaper over time; that will free up extra dollars.

Debbie and Chris Comyns had to triple their mortgage when moving from Newcastle to Sydney last year.

But the gamble could pay off with the $700,000 home in Beaumont Hills predicted to be worth as much as $2 million by the end of the decade.

According to APM’s prediction, the leafy north-west suburb could enjoy an average growth of 13 per cent per annum to the end of 2019.

This figure is based on historical price trends which give an indication of how prices could grow in the suburb.

However, even if this predicted price growth is less, the area and the surrounding suburbs such as Rouse Hill and Kellyville are all tipped to easily break the million dollar barrier.

“It’s just amazing, I think we might have to stay in Sydney,” Ms Comyns said. “It makes us feel a bit more comfortable about doing things to the house, knowing that we will get that money back,”

The couple and their two boys, Ethan and Jack, moved last September, after Mr Comyns was promoted to his company’s Sydney office. They looked around and found little difference between paying rent and a mortgage.

Agent Stephen Giacomelli from Gilmour & Orley said it is possible that prices in Beaumont Hills could reach the double million mark.

By Katrina Creer and Sharon Labi  news.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Perth median price to hit the $1million mark within 10 years

 

Perth’s median house price will hit $1 million in the next 10 years, a property price monitoring group predicts.

A review compiled for the Sunday Times newspaper by Australian Property Monitors has tipped the median house price in many Perth metropolitan suburbs to hit $1 million within five years.

Within 10 years, only a “handful of suburbs in the Perth metropolitan area will have a median house price below $1 million”, the Sunday Times reported.

Western Australia’s house values could be the highest in the country, according to the paper, as the state rides another expected resources boom in the next decade.

The median house price in Peppermint Grove, which lies on the Swan River, just outside the Perth CBD, was predicted to reach more than $25 million in the next decade.

But while the prospect of housing prices doubling in the next 10 years was good news to some property buyers, the paper said first-home buyers were increasingly being priced out of the market.

© 2010 AAP

news.smh.com.au 

Property Investment News – Australia

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10 keys to property investment success…

Most home owners and investors are chasing one thing: explosive capital growth.

One key to getting it is your area’s overall sales performance.

Some locations and suburbs surge ahead of others and deliver amazing price gains. They’re called property ‘hotspots’.

Why should we be chasing hotspots?

“Most property investors want capital growth,” Yardney says. “If you get more than average capital growth, you can borrow against the increased equity and go (buy) again.”

So how can you tell if the suburb you own a house in, or want to buy in, is a hotspot – or potential hotspot?

Here are 10 signs to look for:

1. New transport

New transport links can instantly transform an area’s desirability. “It brings areas that were more remote into closer proximity to the city,” Yardney said. He adds there are usually three waves of price gains on the back of new transport infrastructure: when it’s first announced and everybody gets excited, when construction begins, and near completion. “Those that do best get in early of course, but they’re taking a potential risk that it may not ever be completed or take longer than expected,” he said.

2. Regeneration/rezoning

Governments can spend millions revitalizing an area, improving amenities, road and other infrastructure. In Sydney, the regeneration of Redfern has helped drive strong prices gains for homes. Rezoning from industrial to commercial can also bring a new wave of people moving in, pushing prices higher.

3. New infrastructure

Apart from roads and transport, the building of new amenities including schools, sporting facilities, and universities can transform a location and boost demand for houses.

4. Social trends – sea change

Major social trends can transform areas overnight into high-demand areas. Sleepy coastal areas became hot during the ‘sea change’ trend when people seeking a quieter life moved there permanently or snapped up holiday homes. 

5. Employers relocating

A new factory or other major source of employment can suddenly boost demand for housing and drive up prices.

6. Gentrification

Yardney says one of the most powerful trends is gentrification. Previously working class areas with desirable attributes, such as proximity to the CBD, can suddenly become attractive to more wealthy buyers.

7. Ripple Effects

Housing recoveries often start close to the city centre and move out in what’s dubbed the ‘ripple effect’. Learn to ride the wave. Yardney says when prices rise people go across the road to the next suburb for better value. “People buy in the best location they can afford and if they can’t afford there they move to the neighbouring suburb,” he said.

8. Economic boom towns

Boom towns are driven by a major economic factor that has made people wealthier or attracted more residents. The most obvious example is Perth where property has surged on the back of the resources boom.  

9. Exclusivity

Yardney says some areas are hotspots simply because of their exclusivity which causes them to outperform market averages. “Turnover is low and it’s difficult to buy and when it does come up for the people who buy there, money isn’t as big an object,” he said.

10. Desirability

Some things never stop being in demand: houses with access to the water and houses close to the CBD. These may not only hold up better during property downturns, but their strong rebounds can quickly turn them into hotspots when the market recovers.

Source: http://kerbsideappeal.wordpress.com/

Property Investment News – Australia

Posted via email from scott banks real estate group

Australia – House prices to surge amid property shortage crisis

Australia must build an additional 500,000 houses by 2020 or face a crippling rise in house prices that will make home ownership out of reach for many.

The Housing Industry Association (HIA), which represents the property development industry, says that unless a skills shortage in the building industry and “onerous” planning regulations are addressed, Australians face a future of high interest rates and unaffordable property.

“If we don’t get a comprehensive supply response to the accumulating housing shortage then the lack of affordable and appropriately located rental properties will only worsen, while pressures on existing home prices will continue at an undesirable rate, placing avoidable upward pressure on interest rates,” said Ben Phillips, senior economist at the HIA.

House prices rose by more than 10 percent last year, and analysts say that further double-digit rises are inevitable unless the shortfall in supply is addressed.

The average Australian house price is now $485,000, which, assuming a 10 percent deposit on a 25 year mortgage, requires a monthly repayment of $3100 at today’s interest rates.

That is well out of reach of most first home buyers, according to Matthew Quinn, CEO of property developer Stockland.

Comment: why the housing dream is dead

The Reserve Bank of Australia has also flagged its concerns about the shortage of new houses.

Assistant RBA governor Philip Lowe told an urban development conference earlier this month that Australia must devote a larger share of Gross Domestic Product to property construction to increase the supply of new properties.

“If this does not happen, further adjustment in housing prices and rents is likely to occur to balance supply and demand,” he said.

Australia already has the least affordable houses in the world, according to a ranking of international housing markets released in January.

From a total of 23 Australian regions included in Demographia’s Sixth International Housing Affordability Survey, 22 were labelled severely unaffordable and Australia scored the worst housing affordability rating in the world, followed by Canada.

Demographia calculated the ratings by diving median house prices by annual median household income and named Vancouver as the least affordable city in the world.

Sydney was ranked second, with the Sunshine Coast, Darwin and the Gold Coast rounding out the top five.

Melbourne and Wollongong also made the top ten, coming in at eigth and tenth respectively.

In Sydney, nearly 57 percent of the average income is needed to pay the mortgage on the average house.

By Stuart Fagg, money.ninemsn.com.au

Property Investment News

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Australia is facing a housing affordability ”time bomb”

 

Australia faces a housing affordability ”time bomb” – primed by a dysfunctional planning system, a chronic undersupply of homes, and unrealistic expectations from buyers, according to the chief of one of the nation’s largest homebuilders.

Stockland managing director Matthew Quinn, in a speech in Sydney, said Australia’s current shortage of 200,000 homes and an annual shortfall of 60,000, would balloon to 800,000 by 2020, if no reforms were undertaken.

”There’s a faint ticking that I can hear and it’s getting louder,” he said in a speech yesterday. ”The fuse is burning, and current metropolitan planning strategies are inadequate for our growing and ageing population.”

House prices in Australia climbed 13.6 per cent in 2009 alone after a decade in which they posted increases of about 170 per cent, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Residential real estate prices have soared as Australia’s economy nears notching up two decades of growth without a pause.

Over the same period, Australia has lured more immigrants, adding to housing demand. The federal government’s 2010 intergenerational report estimates Australia’s population will swell to 35.9 million people by 2050 from its current level of 22 million.

“The average first home buyer today cannot afford to pay the median house price – not even close,” Mr. Quinn said, with the average median house price at $485,000.

Mr. Quinn blamed what he called ”a total disconnect between the different levels of government…without action, housing affordability problems are going to get worse.”

Calling Australia’s population growth a ”federal government responsibility,” Mr. Quinn lamented the lack of cohesion between the federal government, the state planning policy and infrastructure delivery, and local council approvals.

Mr. Quinn said building smaller homes is another factor that could ease the shortage and the housing affordability issue, with Stockland reducing its average lot and house sizes for customers.

”Australia is one of the world’s most urbanised nations, with over three-quarters of our population living in major cities and the overwhelming majority in our five largest cities alone,” he said.

”Despite this, our cities are by no means densely populated,” with Australia’s capital cities people per square kilometre density ranking behind Los Angeles, Paris and Tokyo.

Mr. Quinn’s speech was delivered to the Australia Israel Chamber of Commerce.

Stockland posted after tax profits of $214 million for the half-year to December 2009, according to Morningstar.

Source: theage.com.au & http://kerbsideappeal.wordpress.com/

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AUSTRALIA – Ideal conditions for substantial property growth

 

Property investment opportunities are exceptional right now because many values are still priced at reactionary downturn levels, according to Australian Unity Investments head of property Martin Hession. 

He said unlike in the downturn of the late ’80s and early ’90s when property, particularly commercial, was oversupplied, the recent property downturn was due to the banking industry.

“In fact, because banks have not been financing property development for almost two years, supply is set to become tight very quickly,” he said.

“Combined with an economic recovery in Australia and solid growth in white-collar employment, you get the ideal conditions for substantial growth in the property market.”

He said the combination of Australia’s strong economy with a slowdown in development only meant “lots of money chasing too few properties because local and overseas property funds now only want to buy in Australia”.

The wholesale deposit guarantee likely to end on March 31 was also a factor for high capital growth, said Hession, because at some stage investors will start to switch back from bank deposits to property investment.

But cash availability was still constrained which meant the developer’s borrowing cost was still high, he said.

“Property funds and developers generally did not get any of the benefit of the sharp decline in cash rates last year as it was offset by an increase in the risk margins that banks add on top of the basic cost of money,” said Hession.

He said that with official rates back on the way up the cost of debt will be a major issue for some funds, and those with significant amounts of debt are still going to struggle.

Hession said, “Property investors should make sure they fully understand the debt arrangements of any fund or development they are considering investing in.”

apimagazine.com.au

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Australian property market recovers from the financial and economic problems of the past two years much faster than expected

 

Market stronger than expected

AUSTRALIA’S property market has recovered from the financial and economic problems of the past two years much faster than expected and the outlook continues to be positive, according to Martin Hession, head of property at Australian Unity Investments.

Mr Hession said the downturn had been different from that of the late 1980s and early ’90s, when there was an oversupply of property that weighed on the market for years. The recent turmoil, in contrast, had been caused by disruption in the banking industry.

”In fact, because banks have not been financing property development for almost two years, supply is set to become tight very quickly,” Mr Hession said.

He said economic recovery and growth in white-collar jobs were ideal conditions for improvement in the property market.

Opportunities for investors were exceptional because many property values were still at levels set when the market feared Australia was going into a recession.

Mr Hession said listed property trusts had raised billions of dollars to strengthen their position and were ready to invest in Australia. So, too, were overseas property funds.

With little property built in Australia in the past two years, he said lots of money would be chasing too few properties.

He said investors would also start switching back from bank deposits.

PHILIP HOPKINS

Source: The Age

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Skyscrapers have been declared the answer to Melbourne’s population growth…

 

Better use of available city land has been identified as a key to

 maintaining Melbourne’s liveability – and halting urban sprawl.

SKYSCRAPERS have been declared the answer to Melbourne’s urban sprawl by two leading developers, with both revealing plans for more towers as the city struggles to cope with a surging population.

Developer Lorenz Grollo, whose family co-owns the Rialto Towers on Collins Street, is planning to build more skyscrapers modelled on the iconic building.

And Tony Brady, the developer of Melbourne’s next skyscraper, says he will take on more high-rise projects once his 67-storey development on the site of the old Stork Hotel on Elizabeth Street – scheduled to begin this year – is finished.

Mr. Brady, who specialises in residential developments, has three other mid-sized towers of more than 30 storeys under construction, but says he is looking to go higher.

The developers have declared their intentions as The Age today launches a series examining how Melbourne’s planners will cope with a predicted population of 7 million by 2050, an increase of more than 3 million people.

Better use of available city land has been identified as a key to maintaining Melbourne’s liveability, and halting urban sprawl.

But the skyscraper plans drew immediate criticism from designers including high-profile urban planner Rob Adams, director of Design and Culture for the City of Melbourne.

Professor Adams, a leading voice in the push for more targeted low-rise developments across the city, said high-rise developments often had more to do with profitability and image than ”sensible” town planning.

”Really what it is about is buying the land as cheaply as you can and then maximising the development on it. That’s all about dollars. It’s got nothing to do with good design or sustainability, it’s all about economics,” he said.

High-rise buildings tended to be less environmentally efficient than low-rises, he said, and greater housing density could still be achieved without the need for more towers.

Mr. Grollo would not reveal specific plans for a new tower, but said he was looking for high-profile Melbourne sites that could accommodate skyscrapers. ”We are looking at some potential developments in the future which are largely modelled on Rialto,” he said.

”Skyscrapers are part of Melbourne’s future without a doubt. With population increasing, density in building and cities is critical.”

Mr. Grollo argued that there was ”a better, greener outcome when you get a bigger mass on the one footprint”.

”Having said that, it needs to take into consideration the right urban design and how the building sits within its context of a wider precinct. You can’t just build tall buildings for the sake of it,” Mr. Grollo said.

”I’m certainly not a believer in massive towers like in Dubai, that’s bordering on ridiculous, but you go to New York and the average buildings there are 50-odd storey’s. Just because of our land mass here, 50 storey’s seems very high.”

Mr. Brady also argued that skyscrapers were the answer to urban sprawl in Melbourne.

”If you’ve got all these people coming in, the only thing that will stop urban sprawl is to build more skyscrapers because if you don’t spread up you’ve got to spread out,” he said.

Architect and heritage consultant Nigel Lewis warned against further skyscrapers in the Melbourne CBD, calling instead for a moratorium on high-rise developments in key city precincts such as Flinders Lane, Chinatown, and Swanston and Bourke streets.

He said if developers wanted to build more skyscrapers, maybe they should do so at Docklands where they could ”have fun and compete with each other about who can build the biggest … Perhaps the more stuff they put there the better at this stage.”

Skyscrapers are expensive to build and hard to finance because they cannot be done in stages. When it was completed in 2006, the Eureka Tower at Southbank became the city’s tallest building at 297 metres (91 storey’s), eclipsing the Rialto at 242 metres (60 storey’s).

Height restrictions vary between the city’s precincts and can be specific: one planning control for the City of Melbourne permits a maximum height of 23 metres for new buildings, to allow the Parliament buildings to remain ”visually dominant”.

Out of the city, each local government has its own planning scheme with its own height controls and neighbourhood considerations, further adding to the complexity of high-rise development.

kerbsideappeal.com.au & theage.com.au

Posted via email from scott banks real estate group

Stockland CEO blasts ‘extravagant’ homes

 

Australia’s love affair with large homes is extravagant and unsustainable and their size needs to be reduced to make housing more affordable, developer Stockland Group says.

Chief executive Matthew Quinn also said governments needed to back adequate planning if the nation was to affordably house a forecast population of 36 million by 2050.

The average house price was already $485,000, far higher than the $330,000 the average first home buyer could actually afford, Mr Quinn told an Australia Israel Chamber of Commerce business lunch.

He said metropolitan planning strategies were inadequate for a growing and ageing population and there was dysfunction between each level of government in dealing with housing.

“The federal government drives the demand, state government deals with the planning and the local government does the approvals,” he said.

“They don’t talk to each other, in fact they can’t stand each other.

“We need certainty that government will follow through with strategic plans it puts in place.

“We need certainty that development assessments will be delivered in a reasonable timeframe.”

Mr Quinn said there was a huge scope for cities to become more population dense.

“At 83 square metres [for an average dwelling size per person] our housing is extravagant … and it is not sustainable,” he said.

Australia’s largest residential developer said it was building smaller houses that used space more efficiently.

The company reduced its average lot size to 540 square metres and recently began to sell its smallest house yet – 144 square metres at its Highlands community in Melbourne.

Mr Quinn said the homes were selling well as people opted for less debt when buying smaller houses.

“Why pay for a formal dining room that you use once a year and have all of that debt to pay for that formal dining room, when you could have a life instead.”

Stockland shares ended the day 0.25 per cent weaker at $3.95.

Source: businessspectator.com.au & tatianamijalica.com.au

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Two decades after Canberra recorded its first million-dollar sale, almost half of the territory’s suburbs have smashed through the milestone…

Million-dollar neighbourhoods in Canberra

 

 

 

Two decades after Canberra recorded its first million-dollar sale, almost half of the territory’s suburbs have smashed through the milestone.

As the local property market booms, the Sunday Canberra Times can reveal 41 of the ACT’s 98 residential suburbs have achieved a million-dollar sale or beyond.

The traditionally affluent inner-south enclaves of Forrest, Red Hill and Deakin have been joined by more far flung suburbs such as Bonython, Amaroo and Harrison at the million-dollar mark.

Industry figures predict house prices will continue to rocket.

Canberra’s first million-dollar house the former Mugga Way residence of newspaper publisher John Fairfax was sold in 1989.

But according to the director and namesake of Richard Luton Properties, it is inevitable the Canberra market will move past the $10million mark. And soon.

”Canberra has come of age,” Mr Luton said. ”In the 10 years our business has been open we have sold well in excess of 100 million-dollar properties. The market is very strong and house prices tend to double every 10 years. We had a property today in O’Connor that went for $1.265 million, which was $315,000 above the reserve.”

Mr Luton said a dramatic shortfall in the supply of houses in the ACT had led to a seller’s market.

But buyers had not been deterred, turning up in droves at auctions and engaging in fierce bidding wars.

”People are tending to hold on to their properties and if they are going to buy a second they will keep the other as an investment,” he said. ”With the stockmarket taking such a hammering through the financial crisis, people are returning to residential investments.”

LJ Hooker Tuggeranong Real Estate director Mario Sanfrancesco said the market was unlikely to ease off.

”[There is] a fair degree of confidence, right across all sectors,” he said. ”Taking into account the activity we have seen at auctions, the level of enquiry and the number of bidders it is likely to continue throughout the year.”

The same properties were also regularly exchanging hands at escalating prices.

An O’Malley address was sold in 1993 for $200,000. Sixteen years and four owners later, the property achieved a $4million sale.

There are still bargains in the market a one bedroom unit in Campbell sold for $97,500 last year.

At the other end of the scale, the current record for a house belongs to a Moresby Street residence in Red Hill which sold last year for $4.5 million.

SOURCE: BY JESSICA WRIGHT canberratimes.com.au

 Property Investment in Australia

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Australia’s 10 best performing suburbs of the last ten years…

Boom city top for 10-year property prices 

PERTH has been the standout property market of the last decade, with 11 of the city’s suburbs making the top 20 list for the fastest average annual price growth, according to residential researcher RP Data.

Perth has had two housing booms in the past 10 years, effectively creating a bull market for half of the last decade, says RP Data senior analyst Cameron Kusher.

The mining and resources boom pushed the average price growth for Perth houses to 12.2 per cent a year, topped only by Darwin at 14.3 per cent over the past decade.

Sydney fared the worst, with average annual price growth of 6.6 per cent over the past 10 years.

The best-performing individual suburb was Hobart’s Oakdowns, where apartment prices surged 34.6 per cent a year to a median value of $275,000 in December last year, said RP Data. Around the country, the cheapest suburbs saw the strongest price growth over past 10 years.

Thirteen suburbs in RP Data’s top 20 had a current median price below $300,000, while 18 had median prices under $400,000.

Mr Kusher tips quality homes close to the centre of capital cities as having the best price growth prospects. “It comes down to scarcity of supply,” he said.

Australian Bureau of Statistics figures released this week showed home lending fell 7.9 per cent in January after dropping in the previous two months as well.

theaustralian.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Will Melbourne’s median house price overtake Sydney again?

Housing is hotting up, but Melbourne will stay the cooler city

MELBOURNE house prices are on fire – $1 billion worth of auctions every weekend. And now the experts tell us values in the city could outstrip Sydney. Certainly there have been some eye-catching numbers: Melbourne’s median price at $494,000 would certainly seem to be challenging Sydney’s $545,000.

And though it seems like Sydney – where a car space in North Bondi recently went for $240,000 – has long been dearer than Melbourne, the gap only opened up in the early 1980s.

According to property research group Residex, as late as 1979 Melbourne was dearer, with a median house price of $46,000 against Sydney’s $42,000. But around 1980 a combination of factors started to put Sydney way ahead of Melbourne – multinationals preferred Sydney, most of the ASX big listed companies centred there and the city’s population began a climb to beyond four million.

Over the past decade, Sydney experienced regular lunges in prices that Melbourne simply could not match. The price gap by 2004 was huge – Melbourne had barely cleared a median of $300,000 and Sydney had broken $500,000.

Then something happened that’s as regular as a heartbeat – the numbers swung back in favour of Melbourne. This time the rebalance was more dramatic because Sydney had overshot.

Just now Melbourne is having a strong run – immigration, pent-up demand, a stable state government and inevitable momentum from positive headlines push prices up. Meanwhile Sydney seems relatively flat with some weakening of population growth, a post-Olympic hangover (the full effect came after 2004 despite the games occurring four years earlier) and a series of ineffective NSW state governments.

It’s not surprising to hear Residex managing director John Edwards suggest he would ”not be surprised” to see Melbourne prices pass Sydney at some point in the next decade.

Maybe it could happen – briefly – a short-term technicality. But to jump beyond that and suggest that Melbourne house prices will soon surge to the point that Melbourne will become permanently more expensive than Sydney city for houses is nonsense.

It won’t happen. Here’s why: Melbourne home prices are coming to a peak. Scott Keck of Charter Keck Cramer is a valuer, not a real estate agent … a very important distinction. He says: “Prices are strong, but Melbourne certainly won’t eclipse Sydney; there is just too much free land in Melbourne, it’s flat at the city fringe, the residential blocks can go on forever. I believe we’ll see the city prices cool soon.

”In contrast, in Sydney you have the Blue Mountains, state forests up against the city … it’s a totally different market.

What’s more, all the indications are that it’s Sydney that is going to rebalance, very soon.

NSW is at the epicentre of the nation’s housing shortage – a shortage that even the Reserve Bank is publicly worried about following comments by Deputy Governor Philip Lowe a few days ago.

SOURCE: JAMES KIRBY theage.com.au
Property Investment News – Australia

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Property BUBBLE in the outer suburbs, fuelled by first home buyers that are now under most financial pressure due to interest rates

 

Bubble and squeak as first home buyers feel the heat…

A SIGN at the front of the sprawling Central Park estate in Melbourne’s outer west reads ”Grow with us”.

The slogan appeals to buyers like Matthew Tregent and Sarah Zajac, both 20, who were among the many young couples to take advantage of last year’s historic interest rate cuts and unprecedented first home buyer grants to move out of their parents’ homes and into the Deer Park estate.

”Grow with us” implies progress, wealth, and maturity. For a young couple, it might also carry hopes of a growing family and the promise of financial security based on the value of the family home.

Last year, those dreams seemed to be inching closer. In Deer Park, the median house price surged by almost $30,000 in the first nine months – the exact amount offered to those first-timers building a home.

But the couple have already noticed a change. Tregent believes that at least five homes sold in his part of the estate since October were forced sales. Vacant blocks are being resold privately.

”I think it must be because of interest rates, because it just wouldn’t be profitable to sell that quick,” he says. ”Some of them just a month after their house was built.”

As Melbourne real estate boomed late last year – exemplified by Elwood, Elsternwick and Malvern East reaching a million-dollar median for the first time- Deer Park prices bucked the upward trend. The median house price in Deer Park fell by $4000 in the last three months of 2009, according the Real Estate Institute of Victoria. Some residents can no longer afford to ”grow with us”.

Melbourne is experiencing its own ”two-speed economy”, as investors and well-off owner-occupiers drive the inner and middle-suburban markets thanks to a growing confidence that Australia has escaped the worst of the global recession relatively unscathed.

Perversely, however, the euphoria of record-breaking prices for prestige real estate is only one symptom of the improving outlook. Surging home prices have resurrected concerns about huge personal debt and potential inflation.

Interest rates have already climbed four times in almost as many months and are forecast to go up by another full percentage point or more this year.

Higher interest rates mean Tregent and Zajac’s repayments have already gone up by $300 a month. Like many borrowers, they have cut back on eating out, shopping for clothes and socialising on Saturday nights.

They are hardly alone. According to the Fujitsu Mortgage Stress Report this week, more than 40 per cent of the 255,000 first-time buyers who entered the market in the past 18 months are experiencing a degree of mortgage stress. By December, the report forecasts, the figure will rise to half.

Fujitsu’s Martin North says the average loan size has grown way out of proportion to incomes. This gap is made worse by a cultural drift towards credit cards and ”interest-free” shopping.

”Australians have an amazing drive to own property,” he says. ”But the truth is we have an affordability problem and, by people being forced to borrow more than they want because house prices have shot up, we are laying the seeds for potential difficulty later.”

The increased financial pressure is no doubt further evidence to doomsayers that Melbourne’s house prices are headed for an extreme correction.

If they are right, it will happen first in the outer west, east and south-east. First home buyers control up to 80 per cent of new estates and are the most sensitive to rate movements, typically having small deposits, modest incomes and large mortgages.

While some already owe more than their home is worth – the result of prices initially boosted by first home buyer grants, but which fell when the grants were removed – so far,

prices have mostly held steady on the estates. This is in no small part because developers have limited the supply of blocks in recent months.

Of course, the idea of a house price bubble is hotly contested. While there may be bubbles frothing at the fringe, it is a different story closer in, where buyers have more equity and so borrow less.

In inner suburbs like Brunswick, the landscape is much more diverse. Private investors already control about half of housing there. They are insulated from interest rate movements by negative gearing and also have discretion over rents.

The remaining half belongs to owner-occupiers, only some of whom owe money on their homes.

Matthew Armstrong of Property Planning Australia says a very small section of Brunswick is exposed to interest rate movements. ”If there are any forced sales or people under cash pressure, there will be a strong influx of investors to come in and underpin the value of real estate, whereas they won’t be interested in the outskirts,” he says.

Evidence is mounting that property investment is headed for a spurt. Investors made up 37.2 per cent of new Victorian mortgages in February, compared with 24.1 per cent a year ago, according to the Australian Finance Group.

Australians have long had a psychological bent towards property, but this has evolved further in recent years as even young earners pour money into properties instead of superannuation.

Ironically, the financial crisis sparked by dodgy home loans has made Australian property appear about the safest place in the world to incubate a nest egg.

Valuer Perron King of Herron Todd White says investors – with their buying power and tax breaks – are formidable competition in the crush to secure limited inner and middle-Melbourne real estate. ”For inner and middle suburbs, the market is red hot and I can’t see it slowing down,” he says. ”You’d probably need interest rates to rise another 75 basis points … and that could be six months away.”

In middle and inner-Melbourne – within 14 kilometres to the west and north, and 20 kilometres to the south-east – the real estate game has never been busier. Agents are hungry for more, with agents including Bennison Mackinnon placing ”housing wanted” advertisements. While industry players predict further price growth in Melbourne this year, albeit more slowly than last year, King is one of the few predicting a minor correction. He believes there will be a glitch of 5-10 per cent and then a plateau, based on what happened in the cycles that peaked in 2003 and 2007.

Property adviser Monique Sasson Wakelin says the inner markets most vulnerable to softening are suburbs like Cremorne and Burnley, which are next to premium addresses like East Melbourne and Richmond, but do not have the same consistency of architecture.

”A place like Cremorne has benefited from the general market lift but it borders busy roads, doesn’t have a nice shopping strip and still has some light industry,” she says.

The luxury market is also worth watching because, just like the first home buyer belt, it is reactive. Since the equities market rebound that began early last year, Melbourne businessmen have dropped eye-watering amounts for trophy homes in Toorak and Hawthorn ”There could be some softening for homes over $5 million, depending on how the US and UK economies track,” Wakelin says. ”But I don’t see evidence of a major correction in that market at the moment.”

So while sub-markets may languish this year, only property observers at the extremes are still predicting a US-style crash. This is largely because the fundamentals of middle and inner markets are as simple as supply and demand.

Interest rate strategist Rory Robertson of Maquarie Bank dismisses the ”Chicken Littles” as increasingly irrelevant.

”Australia has a very low mortgage default rate,” he says. ”Those who have stretched to buy the best house they can afford have already committed to sacrificing a significant proportion of their income. They will cut back on anything rather than lose their house.”

He names four factors that will keep pushing prices skyward. ”It’s somewhat mechanical,” he says. ”Extraordinary levels of immigration, flat trends in new home building, low interest rates and a good economy all add up to upward pressure on home prices and rents.”

About 300,000 people migrated to Australia last year, mostly to Victoria. But just 150,000 dwellings were built. Added to this is home grown-demand from a wealthy population.

The fact that new home building has dropped off in the outer suburbs speaks volumes about where Victorians would rather live.

But it will not all be smooth sailing for those who can afford to buy inside the middle ring. The Docklands price collapse of some years ago proves that any market with a huge tilt towards one type of buyer can be volatile.

Off-the plan developments and property spruikers will most likely make a big return this year, but poor-quality development at Docklands, St Kilda Road and Southbank are all potential money pits.

But a high-rise dog box could not be more removed from the single-storey house that Tregent and Zajac share on the Central Park estate.

The couple are comfortably settled into their new furniture and three bedrooms.

”We’re still coping fine with our repayments,” Tregent says. ”We know there’s a risk they’ll go up but we can downgrade the internet connection or cut back on TV services if we need to.

”It has been so exciting moving into our own place, especially because we have never rented privately. I guess it’s just the feeling of freedom you get when you drive home into your own driveway.”

Source: MARIKA DOBBIN  The Age & smh.com.au
Property Investment in Australia

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Perth suburbs dominate fastest-growing property areas in Australia

Three unassuming suburbs in Perth’s fringes have emerges as the fastest-growing areas in the country for houses over the past decade.

They may be far from the “Golden Triangle” of the Western Suburbs, but Herne Hill, Jindalee and Bertram have blown their gilded neighbours out of the water, according to the figures compiled by RP Data.

Houses in Herne Hill surged by an average 34.4 per cent a year since 2000, while Jindalee and Bertram both appreciated by an average 33.3 per cent. Hammond Park was not far behind on 33.1 per cent.

The returns were only topped by units in Oakdowns, a fringe suburb of Hobart, which boasts a short drive from Bellerive Oval to the west and Hobart Airport to the north.

Median unit prices there have risen almost 35 per cent annually for the past 10 years to soar to $275,000.

Perth suburbs took out half of the top 10 spots, with Wattle Grove also ranking well thanks to an average 32.6 per cent return.

Fast-growing suburbs on the fringes of Sydney – Blairmount (33.3 per cent) and Beecroft (32.7 per cent) – also saw strong appreciation.

Among locations within a short distance of a city centre, only Melbourne’s relatively inner-city suburb of Gardenvale sneaks into the top 10 in price gains. Units there clocked up an average rise of 32 per cent annually over the past decade, to a median price of $328,000.

Rising house prices have sparked alarm from families struggling to enter the market and even the Reserve Bank chimed in this week, warning that more increases are likely unless the economy diverts extra resources to housing to cope with a rising population. The latest housing finance figures indicate the average first-home buyer’s mortgage is now $284,700 – more than the average outstanding home at $282,800.

RP data, though, noted while the entry costs are rising for new home buyers, the areas they tend to move to have been the star performers over the past 10 years.

”Interestingly, the analysis revealed that affordable suburbs witnessed the strongest growth over the decade,” RP said in a release. It noted that 13 of the top 20 performers have a current median price below $300,000, while 18 of them are sub-$400,000.

At a regional level, the country’s best-performing location was also away from the major centres. The north Queensland town of Silkwood, located in the sugar-growing region south of Innisfail and Cairns, reported an average increase of 35 per cent in its houses over the past decade, bringing the median price to $235,000.

That’s about half the current median dwelling price of $449,000 in the country’s capital cities, the report said.

SOURCE: wabusinessnews.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Top 20 list of the nation’s best performing property areas over the past decade

    

Perth suburbs dominate property list   

The outer suburbs of Perth have dominated a top 20 list of the nation’s best performing property areas over the past decade with Herne Hill, near Midland, leading the Perth charge.  

   

Property researcher RP Data this week released Australia’s best performing city and regional property markets over the past decade, based on the annual average growth.   

  

Hobart’s Oakdowns topped the list with the value of units in the suburb posting an annual average growth over the past 10 years of 34.6 per cent. The median cost of a unit is $275,000.    

Herne Hill came in second with a house in the suburb posting an average annual growth rate of 34.4 per cent. The median price of a house in the area is $595,000.    

Other Perth suburbs featured in the top 10 were Jindalee (33.3 per cent), Bertram (33.3 per cent), Hammond Park (33.1 per cent) and Wattle Grove (32.6 per cent).    

Completing Perth’s domination in the top 20 were Aubin Grove (32.3 per cent), Butler (32.1 per cent), Carramar (29.9 per cent), Darch (29.3 per cent), Sinagra (29 per cent) and Beeliar (28.5 per cent).    

Regionally, Western Australia made two appearances with Collie representing    

Regionally, Western Australia made two appearance with a house in Collie posting an average annual growth rate of 34 per cent. The town came sixth in the top 20 best performing regional centres.    

Beachlands, near Geraldton, was the other WA regional area to be mentioned with a growth rate of 31.7 per cent.  

SOURCE: Rebecca Lawson wabusinessnews.com.au  

 Property Investment News – Australia   

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Is there a Melbourne housing bubble?

    

What is it about housing that stimulates so much uninformed debate? Most articles produced by notionally reputable authorities are factually incorrect. Since almost all of us have a roof over our heads, we feel like instant experts on the subject. But the truth is that the housing market is one of the least understood sectors of the economy.

Extreme myths and misconceptions pervade almost every discussion one engages in: debt servicing is incredibly poor (despite Australia’s high mortgage rates, it is actually exceptionally good by global standards based on our very low default rates); affordability is at all time lows (it is, in fact, around where it has been on average over the last 20-30 years using a range of different measures); prices are seven or eight times incomes (average home prices are actually 4.6 times average disposable household incomes using the largest sales database in Australia and the ABS’s December 2009 National Accounts data); prices have skyrocketed over the last five years (growth in national home values has, in fact, been almost exactly on par with per capita incomes and significantly less than system-wide income); and prices are purely determined by ‘demand-side’ factors, such as credit growth and interest rates (a mistake made by some high-profile economists during the GFC, who now presumably recognise that the supply-side has a role to play).

I end up spending an inordinate amount of time busting housing myths on behalf of journalists, commentators, analysts, economists and policymakers (a classic example is this interview with Peter Switzer on Sky Business). One of the few exceptions to this intellectual lacuna is the RBA. All I can say is, Thank God for Australia’s Central Bank (at least most of the time). On the right day, the RBA’s executives are experts at the myth-busting business. Phil Lowe offered up some outstanding commentary yesterday. And in this housing domain, the RBA’s efforts are led by a world-class group of professionals, including, amongst others, Dr Anthony Richards, Luci Ellis, Paul Bloxham and the little-known young ’en, Natasha Cassidy.

The latest falsehood doing the rounds is about the Melbourne house price boom. Readers down south would be familiar with the story, with headlines screaming out at them that a gigantic ‘bubble’ is about to burst. But as with all things related to housing, the facts do not fit comfortably with the fiction (I am quoted in the AFR about this today). And the ‘bubble’ moniker is almost exclusively reserved for those who are talking out of their behinds when it comes to housing.

Between December 2003 and December 2009 the compound annual growth rate of disposable household incomes across all Australian areas was 5.7 per cent based on the ABS National Accounts data (unfortunately the ABS does not provide timely quarterly data for individual cities, so we will have to make do with the national estimates). Now it is important to note here that the ‘system-wide’ growth rate was a higher 7.9 per cent per annum. Our lower 5.7 per cent estimate takes the system-wide growth and deflates by the total number of households for an equivalent per capita measure.

So what have Melbourne house prices done? Unsurprisingly, the compound annual growth rate of Melbourne dwelling prices over the same period has been 6.8 per cent based on RP Data-Rismark’s Hedonic Index. In short, Melbourne dwelling prices have grown at a similar, albeit higher rate, than national incomes over the last six years. It is an open empirical question as to whether the difference between the two estimates is accounted for by Melbourne’s household income growth, which we cannot easily measure.

Support for this latter thesis is provided by a more like-for-like comparison between overall Australian dwelling prices in capital cities and national disposable household income growth. We have to start this analysis in December 2004 since this is the inception date of RP Data-Rismark’s Hedonic Index. Over the period end 2004 to end 2009 home values in Australia’s capital cities rose by 6.1 per cent per annum. While system-wide disposable incomes grew by a much stronger 7.9 per cent per annum, if we deflate by the number of households we get an annual growth rate of exactly 6.0 per cent. That is, national home prices have tracked 1:1 with per capita incomes.

While the media is caught up in the hyperbole surrounding the 2009 capital growth rates, they forget that Melbourne dwelling prices only rose by 2.6 per cent per annum over the three year period 2004, 2005 and 2006. And then Melbourne prices actually fell by nearly 2 per cent in 2008. So four of the last six years have seen exceptionally weak growth. But, of course, that does not make for a stunning story. The reason the average growth rate between end 2003 and end 2009 is a higher 6.8 per cent is because of the two anomalies: ie, the smart capital gains registered in 2007 and 2009.

Over the medium term one might reasonably expect Melbourne dwelling prices to rise broadly in line with purchasing power. Of course, on a year-by-year basis the outcomes can vary around this trend: some periods will see little growth while others will appear comparatively spectacular.

The sensibility of Melbourne housing valuations is reflected in the median price data. If we take the median (or middle) price from all home sales transacted in Melbourne in the three months to end January 2010, we arrive at a median city-wide dwelling value of $455,000. The national median dwelling value in capital cities is $449,000. That is, almost identical to the Melbourne median. Indeed, median dwelling prices are actually more expensive in Sydney ($494,500), Perth ($472,500) and Canberra ($489,250).

SOURCE: christopherjoye.blogspot.com   

Property Investment News – Australia   

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Some property prices could rise by 10% this year

 

Sydney house prices tipped to push higher.

Property prices in Sydney’s inner and middle rings could rise by up to 10 per cent this year, according to an industry association.

The Real Estate Buyer’s Agents Association of Australia said much depended on the effect of rising interest rates and tighter loan conditions.

But property prices will rise in key centers in Queensland, NSW, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania, with Sydney in particular set to benefit from pent-up demand and increases of up to 10 per cent, it said.

REBAA president Byron Rose said that after a busy end to 2009, investors continued to show keen interest into 2010, with more buyers around than properties.

‘‘We expect the current high levels of buyer activity to continue for the first half of the year,’’ he said in a statement outlining the association’s market predictions. ‘‘But we’re also ready for buyers to pull back from the market once the reality of rate rises hit home and as affordability in some states continues to decline.’’

The REBAA’s NSW spokesman Rich Harvey said key areas of interest for property investors in Sydney include the northern beaches, inner west, eastern suburbs and select parts of the North Shore.

‘‘In regional areas, we favour the Hunter Valley, Orange, Port Macquarie and the far northern coast of NSW,’’ he said. ‘‘I believe the property market is in a rising phase, which should continue solidly for the next three years.’’

Mr Harvey said with the unemployment rate declining, subdued inflation, rising migration and population rates, demand for housing was rising.

‘‘Sydney, in particular, will see solid capital growth because of our spectacular beaches, clean environment, beautiful harbour and wide range of housing styles,’’ he added.

Standard variable home loan rates have been on the rise since the Reserve Bank of Australia began hiking official rates late last year and are now around 6.85 per cent.

The central bank last moved on March 2 when it lifted its cash interest rate by 25 basis points to four per cent, leading the major banks to make similar hikes.

AAP

SOURCE: smh.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Australia’s population growth is inevitable, what we urgently need is a plan of action…

Calls for action on population growth

Building “a new city or two” in the region is one of Michael Matusik’s suggestions to combat population growth.
The head of Matusik Property Insights has suggested a range of measures to accommodate more people in South East Queensland as part of The Property Council’s Great Growth Debate in Brisbane.
Speaking for the negative team on the question of “Should we introduce a population cap for South East Queensland”, Mr Matusik was joined by Devine Limited CEO David Keir in labelling the discussion as a waste of time, saying growth was inevitable.
“We can’t stop it and even if we wanted to, we’re helpless to do so,” Mr Matusik said.
“Even planning for growth is a waste of time. What we should be debating is how to accommodate growth.”
Mr Matusik suggested decentralising the workforce, building new cities, making urbanisation work, making building approvals easier and faster to get and utilise existing facilities.
“Action is missing and so is political fortitude, especially from a State Government level,” he said.
Sunshine Coast Mayor Bob Abbot, speaking for the affirmative, said Australia’s approach to population growth was a joke.
Councillor Abbot called on the Government to create a population policy, saying his community has had enough.
“It’s a joke. The whole thing’s a joke,” he said.
“Let’s get serious about some good debate.
“The concept of our economy in this country being based solely on population growth is a fallacy.”
Ipswich Mayor Paul Pisasale, on the negative team, blamed government for the high cost of housing.
“The cost of housing is high because of all the processes in place,” Cr Pisasale said.
He also said South East Queensland, and Australia, were “becoming a joke, where we’re telling people we don’t want you to come here”.
Sustainable Population Australia president Simon Baltais, speaking for the affirmative, said the real issue was what is an ecologically sustainable population and what is the socially appropriate way of achieving that.
“It means we still have an immigration program and you don’t need to tell women how many babies they should have,” Mr Baltais said.
“Growth at the moment isn’t protecting our lifestyle.”
Also on the affirmative team was the author of Overloading Australia, Mark O’Connor, who said Australia’s population could be capped at 23 million people “if we choose”.

SOURCE: southern-star.whereilive.com.au 

Property Investment News – Australia

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BIGGEST population boom in 50 years will cause housing shortage, property prices and rents to rise, says Reserve Bank of Australia

 

Under-supply challenges recovery: RBA

A greater share of the economy needs to be devoted to housing to deal with a population boom, otherwise property prices and rents will rise, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) says.

The new phase of economic expansion also means emerging labour and skills shortages have to be dealt with, RBA assistant governor (economics) Philip Lowe says.

A second challenge was the capacity of the economy to deal with an increase in dwelling construction at a time when investment elsewhere in the economy was very high.

“If housing construction is very strong at the same time that the resources sector is expanding, there will be competing demands for a range of skilled workers and specialised services,” Dr Lowe told a business audience in Sydney.

“Managing these competing demands and ensuring the adequate supply of workers with appropriate skills will be a challenge,” he told the Urban Development Institute of Australia National Congress on Wednesday.

Dr Lowe said Australia was likely to devote a higher share of its GDP to housing than has been the case historically, or risk a further adjustment in housing prices and rents to balance supply and demand.

Unlike most countries rocked by the global financial crisis, Australia did not have an unsustainable surge in dwelling investment in the middle years of the 2000s resulting in oversupply of housing, he said.

Dr Lowe said business investment in Australia was around 16 per cent of gross national product, close to a 40-year peak, and was expected to rise over the next two years.

However, the growth rate of dwelling construction had been below the average of the past 50 years, while the population now was increasing at its fastest pace over the same period.

“If we are to build more dwellings, we need to ensure that planning guidelines and infrastructure provision can accommodate this. This will pose challenges for all levels of government.

“Elsewhere, the challenge is to get private demand to grow on a sustainable basis so that it can catch up with the supply potential of the economy,” Dr Lowe said.

“In contrast, for Australia, the main task is to expand the supply side of the economy so that demand can grow solidly without causing inflation to rise.”

Citigroup global markets director Paul Brennan said Dr Lowe’s speech highlighted the need to focus on the supply side of the economy and that controlling demand through interest rates would remain the RBA’s central tool.

“Given that supply-side policies take time to implement and impact with long lags, monetary policy will continue to be the policy of choice to address the inflation pressures that we expect to develop by next year,” Mr Brennan said in a research note.

Some market analysts say the RBA will again lift the rate if Thursday’s Australian Bureau of Statistics labour force data shows strong growth.

An AAP survey of 11 economists last week found that 10,000 jobs were expected to have been created in February and the unemployment rate was tipped to rise to 5.4 per cent, from 5.3 per cent the previous month.

SOURCE: ninemsn

Property Investment News – Australia

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Expert recommend the best places to buy property in Australia in 2010

 

Property prices are on the rise in 2010, so where will you get the best bang for your buck?

According to Matthew Bell, economist at Australian Property Monitors (APM), Brisbane and Perth are the best places to buy.

“Queensland and Western Australia’s increased exposure to the downturns in both the resources and tourism sectors has meant that price recovery for both houses and units have trailed other states,” says Bell. “However it’s important to move now as prices are likely to recover in early 2010.”

But he also says there are opportunities for bargains in Sydney and Melbourne where some suburbs still remain under their late-2007 levels, even after the strong growth of the last six months.

Queensland

In Queensland, Bell says the best suburbs to buy are Hawthorne and Lota for houses and Kangaroo Point for units.

Meighan Hetherington, managing director of buyer’s agents and advisers Property Pursuit in Brisbane, points to suburbs that will benefit from infrastructure developments including the northern busway, the airport link and the Clem 7 tunnel.

“Lutwyche, Kedron, Gordon Park, Alderley, Enoggera, Greenslopes and Woolloongabba will all be good suburbs,” says Hetherington. For owner occupiers she sees premium suburbs such as Paddington, Auchenflower and Bulimba all showing potential.

Dan Molloy, managing director of the Real Estate Institute of Queensland, says steady demand from both owner occupiers and investors together with population growth will put pressure on supply in the north-eastern State.

“Regional Queensland has started to return to form with agents reporting steady demand and price growth,” says Molloy. “Rockhampton and Toowoomba were two of the top Queensland performers of 2009, due partly to their proximity to major resource or energy precincts and affordable prices. Being a resource community – together with Gladstone and Mackay – augurs well for the future of these regions.”

Victoria

Bell’s Victorian hot spots include Mentone for houses and Toorak for units.

Population growth will be the key driver in Melbourne. The Real Estate Institute of Victoria’s policy, communication and research manager Robert Larocca says growth in the population of the Victorian capital has more than doubled in the last five years from 55,000 new residents a year to 113,000. Little wonder that Melbourne property prices jumped some 20 per cent in 2009 to crack the $500,000 median price for the very first time in the fourth quarter.

The Real Estate Institute of Victoria has given mostly inner city and bayside suburbs a five star rating which means these areas could see growth of 8 per cent or more in the next three to five years. Such suburbs include Carlton, Caulfield, Moonee Ponds, Sandringham and St Kilda.

New South Wales

Sydney suburbs offering opportunity according to APM’s Bell include Mona Vale for houses and Woolloomooloo for units.

Tim McKibbin, CEO of the Real Estate Institute of NSW says that any area within a 5-10 km radius of the CBD offers potential as there is a shortage of rental properties in these areas.

RP Data says suburbs that are likely to record capital growth are those where population growth is strong, housing supply is constrained, transport infrastructure provides efficient commuting options and social and retail infrastructure is conveniently based.

A recent report by RPA Data cites such suburbs as being Granville, Rockdale, Lidcombe, Riverwood and Waterloo.

Western Australia

Bell’s top picks in Western Australia include Halls Head and Nollamara for houses and Mandurah for units.

RP Data meanwhile sees promise in Bassendean on the shores of the Swan River, Thornlie, 15km south-east of the CBD, Kenwick, Cannington and Kewdale.

South Australia

Thebarton, directly North-West of the Adelaide CBD represents a very appealing purchase price according to RP Data, given its proximity to the city. Further out, Glanville is more affordable than most of its surrounding suburbs.

Other strong contenders in SA are Brompton, Torrensville and Parkside.

Tasmania

In Tasmania, Martin Harris CEO of the Real Estate Institute of Tasmania expects the housing market to continue to grow in the island state over the next few years.

“Growth in Tasmania continues to focus on some suburban areas of Launceston and Hobart,” says Harris.

In Hobart he singles out Kingborough, 15 minutes south of the CBD, along with Lindisfarne, Mornington, Warrane, New Town, Moonah and Glenorchy. In Launceston he highlights Newstead, Invermay and West Launceston.

Outlook

The general consensus is that now is the time to buy.

“We are at the start of an upswing in the cycle,” says Meighan Hetherington, managing director of buyer’s agents and advisers Property Pursuit in Brisbane. “This is a fantastic time to be buying property.”

Whether you are an owner occupier or an investor there are benefits in buying now.

APM’s Bell while house prices in some areas have already exceeded by nearly 3 per cent the levels prevailing before the global financial crisis, that growth is expected to continue well into the current year.

Angie Zigomanis, researcher with BIS Shrapnel says that he expects property prices to rise in the mid-to-high single figure digits in 2010.

He adds that even though the first home owners grant has gone back to $7000, there was still plenty of demand in this market for three key reasons.

“Firstly there is the demographic spike of 25 to 35 year old who are generally first home buyers,” says Zigomanis. “Then you have interest rates that are still pretty low and if you compare buying with renting, buying is more attractive.”

The rent/buy argument is certainly bolstered when you look at the median rent. APM says median house rentals were $460 a week in Sydney in the December quarter of 2009 although in Melbourne they are a little lower at $360 a week.

When buying Property Pursuit suggests you also look at such factors as rentability, potential and affordability.

For instance, Hetherington says you should always stay within the second and third quartile of prices in the suburb in terms of price and rent and make sure that the surrounding properties cannot become high density blocks of units.

The old adage is that if you should always buy well when it comes to property.

“When looking for property bargains it pays to do your homework to make sure you are choosing an area and a property t hat is likely to see your investment grow,” says Bell.

So he suggests you do thorough research of a property and its area looking at recent and historical sales data, auction clearance rates, rental yields, price differentials and trends. One good website to glean this information can be found at www.homepriceguide.com.au

Also, seek advice from your local real estate agents who have expert knowledge and experience in the suburb.

SOURCE: aussie.com.au

Property Investment News – Australia

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Trendy Melbourne suburb… average house price increase by over $500,000 last year!

SOME of Melbourne’s hottest suburbs have seen average house prices skyrocket by more than $500,000 in a year.

Home owners in country town Ouyen and trendy St Kilda were the biggest movers, with median house prices increasing by more than 50 per cent in the 12 months to last September.

And home owners in Armadale saw their average prices increase by about $510,000 in one year.

Median house prices across Melbourne rose 3.7 per cent in the September quarter last year.

Figures released by the valuer-general show the median house price in metropolitan Melbourne increased from $405,000 to $420,000.

The average price for units in Victoria increased 5.1 per cent to $362,500, after a 7.8 per cent rise in the previous quarter.

The median price of a unit in Victoria was greater than the median house price, which also increased by 3.3 per cent from $335,000 to $360,000 in the September quarter.

The place with the highest rise in median price compared with the year before was Ouyen, which saw a 57.6 per cent increase from the same quarter in 2008, to register a median house price of $145,000.

The number of houses sold in the quarter ending September was 18,415. Only areas that sold at least 10 houses in the September 2009 quarter were listed.

SOURCE: heraldsun.com.au 

Property Investment News – Australia

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Australian residential housing… what next, BOOM or BUST that is the question?

Residential housing: The next bubble or boom? 

 

Last week I took part in a debate entitled “The Great Residential Housing Debate – the next Bubble or a legitimate Boom?” at the annual conference for Perennial Investment Partners; I put the Bubble case and Chris Joye of Rismark International presented the Boom case (here is my paper and my presentation). As is well-known, Australia is one of the few countries in the OECD not to experience two quarters or more of falling GDP as a result of the GFC, and probably the only country that has not experienced a fall in its property market.  

  

The conference was held twice, firstly in Melbourne on Wednesday February 24th, and then in Sydney on Friday 26th. There were roughly 400 people in the audience on both occasions, all of whom were customers of Perennial – with the majority (roughly 75%) being financial planners. The conference employed an electronic voting mechanism that let participants answer general questions, as well as rate the speakers. In our debate, it was used to work out where people stood on the “Bubble vs Boom” spectrum both before and after the debate. A “1″ indicated a complete Bear who expected property to crash and advised getting out now, while a “10″ was a complete Bull who advised “Buy, Buy, Buy”.  

Prior to our debate in Melbourne, the average score was 4.9. This surprised me, because I expected the audience to be generally pro-property; however a score of below 5.5 indicated that overall the audience was bearish on property (since the average of the ten numbers from 1 to 10 is 5.5).  

After our debate, the score was 5.2 – a small move in favour of the bullish position, but still slightly in the bearish camp. Chris commented that this was “about even” and “too close to call” as he left the stage, which I thought was a fair enough summary of the outcome.  

So I was stunned when Crikey asked me to respond to the report Chris had given them of the Melbourne debate (“Reflections on Cage Match Mk 1″), which included the statements that:  

“So I think I pretty comprehensively monstered Steve Keen at our debate in Melbourne yesterday. That was certainly the feedback from those who attended (there were 500)… While I felt I was able to intellectually tear Steve apart limb-by-limb, I will say this: he is a lovely guy. Very diplomatic and humble in defeat…”; and  

“Unfortunately, the electronic scoring in yesterday’s debate was a bit convoluted: it measured the shift in the audience sentiment from bearish (Steve) to bullish (Chris) before and after the event. On that basis, I won. But I think a simpler Chris versus Steve voting system would have made the difference much more striking…”  

Huh? The rest of the post was of a similar vein – though there were occasional caveats such as “As I noted in my presentation, Steve has made some valid criticisms of conventional economics, and its neglect of debt capital market imperfections. And he deserves some kudos for anticipating a credit crisis” (gee, thanks!), even this was immediately followed by “But whatever strengths he possesses are overwhelmed by his propensity to make silly statements.”  

I had no intention of commenting on the debate prior to seeing this hit a national news site, but of course this couldn’t be ignored – though at the same time it didn’t deserve to be taken seriously. So I took a facetious approach – opening my reply with “I don’t know what Chris consumed after our talk at Perennial’s conference yesterday, but if he has any spare I’d like to try it at a party tomorrow night”, and concluding with the advice to Chris that, “Next time, after a conference, don’t consume anything, just take a cold shower” (I also pointed out the statistical fact Chris apparently missed, that the middle point in scores from 1 to 10 is not 5, but 5.5).  

Chris took this rejoinder very well – despite our fundamental differences over this issue, we get on well personally, and unlike some participants in this debate, he does have a sense of humour.  

And so we proceeded to Sydney. There the audience was slightly less bearish than in Melbourne: the average score prior to the debate was 5.3, just slightly below the neutral level. But after the debate, there was a significant shift towards the Bear case. The post debate score was 4.6.  

Chris had made the classic mistake of declaring victory at half-time, only to get a cold shower with the full-time result.  

Chris in part attributed doing poorly in Sydney to a couple of personal mishaps that morning prior to the debate – and he did say that he expected not to speak as well as in Melbourne before the debate in Sydney took place. That would certainly have been a factor.  

One other factor may be that I developed the numerical example used in this DebtWatch Report after the Melbourne conference. That gave the Sydney audience a clearer idea of why debt-deflation matters – and why the servicing cost of debt, which Chris insists is not high, is not the main problem with a debt-driven economy.  

Of course, I dispute the argument that debt servicing costs are not particularly high today. As the next chart shows, even though the RBA’s rate cuts have reduced the cost substantially from its peak, interest payments on mortgages in Australia today consume 7.5% of household disposable income. This is 1.65 times the average from 1976 till now.  

  

Yet this “average” itself is almost as high as the debt servicing costs in 1990, when mortgage rates were an astronomical 17% – 2.5 times as high as today’s rates. The primary driver behind this extreme rise in debt servicing costs is the factor Chris loves to ignore, the ratio of mortgage debt to income. This is more than five times larger today than it was in 1990 (130% of household disposable income versus 25% in 1990).  

In Sydney, the audience was advised (after our debate) to make a large change to its previous number if they were persuaded one way or the other; this may have made the final swing larger in Sydney than Melbourne.  

Finally, Chris later argued later that financial planners are inherently bearish on residential property, since they want to advise people to get into stocks instead. That is an argument that I would prefer to take with a grain of salt. Whether that is true or not as a general proposition, it appears that the people “Mum and Dad investors” might rely upon for advice about where to put their speculative dollars are on average telling them not to put them into residential property, which is the opposite advice to that one sees regularly in the Australian media today (sourced from commentators who clearly have no pecuniary interest in whether house prices rise or fall…). 

SOURCE: Steve Keen is Associate Professor of Economics & Finance at the University of Western Sydney, a fellow of the Centre for Policy Development and author of the best-selling book Debunking Economics  abc.net.au 

Property Investment News – Australia 

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Australia ranked 4th in the world for housing price growth last year…

 

Australia’s housing market bounces back as others lag

The world’s housing markets are mostly in recovery. And Australia just missed out on a spot on last year’s winners’ podium, with its 11.2 per cent annual price growth ranked fourth-best in the world, says the Global Property Guide’s latest survey.

Australia’s December quarter growth was 4.63 per cent, which more than recovered its 4.08 per cent downturn for all of 2008.

During the December quarter, house prices rose in 23 countries, of the 34 countries for which quarterly statistics are available. They fell in 11 countries. The annual data had 16 countries experiencing price increases, with 18 countries recording declines last year.

Seven countries, led by Israel, have recorded two years of positive growth. Ten countries have recorded two negative years.

The biggest price decline took place in Latvia, down 50.2 per cent last year, after a fall of 36.9 per cent in 2008. Latvia’s house prices started falling in 2007 following government efforts to tame inflation and discourage property speculation. Latvia had been among the fastest growing countries in Europe, with house prices typically tripling between 2004 to 2007, says the guide’s publisher, Matthew Montagu-Pollock.

The next biggest price decline took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, where its dramatic roller coaster ride attracted headlines around the world, especially since the government and its citizens thought they were immune from the downtown, given its delayed arrival.

Prices fell 43.2 per cent last year, after a surge of 42.6 per cent in 2008.

Dubai might possibly have turned the corner after a rise of 0.8 per cent in the December quarter.

Prices fell 2.4 per cent in the United States last year, adding to the 18.9 per cent decline in 2008. But recovery is under way in Britain, with 3.3 per cent growth last year, after a fall of 14.7 per cent in 2008. Ireland’s housing markets had an 11 per cent fall last year, just less that its 2008 decline of 11.8 per cent. The last quarter offered no respite, with a 5.8 per cent fall, the worst since quarterly records were kept.

Ireland’s economy has shrunk by 7.4 per cent and unemployment has almost doubled to 11.6 per cent.

Hong Kong was the world’s top performer last year, surging 20.8 per cent after a 15 per cent decline in the first quarter. Mainland buyers account for 15 per cent of buyers, with mortgage interest rates at about 2 per cent, given the currency peg to the US dollar.

Australia, having breezed through the downturn, also has its roller-skates back on. Parochial circumstances might warrant the price fillip, but there are logical relativities now out of alignment. Temperate interest rate rises might ensure we don’t meet the same fate as Latvia, Dubai and Ireland, but there is a commonality between all the countries. The more dramatic the rise, the harder the fall.

SOURCE: JONATHAN CHANCELLOR smh.com.au

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Is Australia now ready… for its next BOOM?

Photo by Ensign John Gay, US Navy, somewhere over the Pacific between Hawaii and Japan, July 7, 1999. 

 

Australia gears up for boom

The Australian economy has emerged from the global financial crisis relatively unscathed and is now gearing up for another major cyclical upswing, according to BIS Shrapnel’s Long Term Forecast Report.

The report, released today, also said Australians should brace themselves for further rate rises as the economy continues to strengthen by way of increasing employment and greater exports.

“We should see the Reserve Bank hike rates from neutral to contractionary, meaning a cash rate over 6 per cent and the housing variable toward 9 per cent before the next episode is over,” BIS’ senior economist Richard Robinson said.

Mr Robinson said he expects there to be another boom within the decade.

“We are now well and truly into recovery from what turned out to be a modest downturn – and not a recession as other forecasters predicted at this time last year,” he said.

“I know the GFC is still front of mind, but it won’t take long before we forget. Remember the ‘disastrous’ share market crash of October 1987, which was quickly followed by the property boom of 1989, which preceded the recession ‘we had to have’. The build up this time will be slower, but it’s the current caution in risk averse debt and equity markets that is setting us up for the stock and capacity shortages that will underwrite the next boom later this decade.”

SOURCE: rebonline.com.au

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Sydney Property BOOM tipped for 2010: a very strong tip to put your house on…

 

Ready … Jane Flemming and Ian Purchas with twins Samuel and James

on the hunt for property in Woollahra. Photo: Helen Nezdropa

WHAT a difference a year makes.

Last February many property experts were prophets of doom in the face of the world financial crisis. But today’s Sun-Herald Property Guide paints a rosy picture for a large number of home owners.

Eighty two suburbs are tipped to see median price growth of 10 per cent or more for houses over the next year, while 53 suburbs will see 10 per cent growth or more in apartment values.

The Fairfax-owned Australian Property Monitors, which gives price data and predictions for more than 600 Sydney suburbs in today’s guide, expects some of the year’s hottest performers for houses to be beachside: Bondi Beach, South Coogee, Tamarama and Curl Curl with more than 12 per cent median price growth likely.

The star apartment suburbs include Darling Point, Point Piper, Cammeray, Lane Cove, McMahons Point and Avalon, which are also tipped to experience median price growth of more than 12 per cent.

APM economist Matthew Bell said rising interest rates would take their toll on the more affordable suburbs in Sydney by the end of the year.

”Once we reach 7.5 per cent to 8 per cent, rates will start altering people’s buying decisions,” he said.

Yet today the toughest challenge facing buyers continued to be finding an affordable home that appealed to them, a situation made worse by a shortage of new listings in many areas.

”Prices are on the way up,” said downsizer Leslie Reily, who has been scouring Glebe, Camperdown, Erskineville and Newtown for a three-bedroom house or apartment priced up to $900,000 since April.

”I’ve come close to buying a couple of times but just missed out. It’s a difficult one – things are changing really quickly and with interest rates going up, it will be interesting to see if prices stabilise.” She’s not holding her breath.

”In the end, it comes down to when you need a house,” she said.

Upgraders are having similar problems after prices unexpectedly increased in the second half of last year as confidence improved.

Olympian Jane Flemming and husband Ian Purchas – parents of twins James and Samuel – forked out $2500 in legal and inspection expenses in preparation to bid at a recent auction only to have the house sell for $800,000 more than the agent quoted.

“Prices are moving at the mid to upper end of the market, I think driven by [consumer] confidence,” Flemming said.

“If we found something tomorrow we would make an offer and move in next week. All our ducks are in a line now – we just need to find the right property.”

Most analysts anticipate a slowdown in first-home buyer activity in 2010, with researcher RP Data reporting the volume of first-timers last year was the highest on record – a 55 per cent increase on the previous year.

SOURCE: smh.com.au

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Are property prices in Australia too high?

   

Australia’s mortgage debt blow-out  

Debt doom prophet Professor Steve Keen has criticised the government’s decision to open the door for more foreign investment in local real estate, accusing the government with ”importing a bubble” from China.  

”If houses aren’t for the people in their own country, then who the hell are they for?” Dr Keen asked. ”And if you let incomes in other countries determine your prices, all you’re doing is importing a bubble,” he said.  

The federal government relaxed its foreign investment rules for residential property early last year. While the controlling body, the Foreign Investment Review Board, does not disclose the exact number of sales to overseas investors, anecdotal reports from would-be local buyers and real estate agents across the country point to a surge in spending from Asia – particularly mainland China. Agents are also setting up offices in China and arranging ”property tourism” to tap the demand.  

Have you been squeezed out of the market or are you facing rising rents? Email czappone@fairfax.com.au   

The additional demand from abroad is contributing to rising property prices – with average median prices surging more than 10 per cent in capital cities last year – and fuelling the disappointment of would-be local buyers who are being out-bid.  

”We have lost three properties (that we know of) to overseas investors who pushed the prices well above the limits of the Australian residents in the room,” said Nikki Symonds, from Sydney’s Lane Cove. ”Three overseas online bidders pushed the price up from $880,000 to $950,000.”  

”Our search continues, but we are forced to look further and further outside of Sydney to have even the faintest hope of securing a house,” she said. ”Great Australian Dream? I don’t think so.”  

China boom   

Others expressed doubt about Dr Keen’s view on Chinese investment.  

‘‘The ‘bubble crew’ seem to keep missing the main story,’’ said Macquarie interest rate strategist Rory Robertson.   

‘‘There’s extraordinary and ongoing rapid growth in the number of actual people in Australia with money wanting to own or rent houses in which to live – as opposed to living in tents and shipping containers – while the underlying long-term trend in homebuilding remains flat near 150,000 per annum.’’   

That demand, against a structural shortage of supply, is what is keeping up home prices, said Mr Robertson.   

While Dr Keen has made some contentious comments about the local real estate market, his view that China is facing a real estate bubble of its own – which is part of the reason for the overflow into the Australian market – is gaining wider currency.  

Property prices in 70 Chinese cities jumped 9.5 per cent in January from a year ago, the fastest pace in 21 months,  prompting the central government to direct its banks to slow lending. China resorted to massive stimulus spending to prevent the economy sliding into recession, but much of the money has ended up in asset markets, including real estate.  

Charter Keck Cramer senior economist George Bougias said Asian countries are playing a bigger role in the local property market and people are increasingly looking at Australia as an attractive investment destination.  

“As economic relations between Australia and China deepen, we can expect more interest from Chinese nationals in the Australian property market,” he said.  

Nevertheless, the lack of statistics measuring the pace of their investment makes it difficult to determine the final impact.  

”We want to ensure that housing remains affordable for the majority of the population whether they’ve been here for 200 years or just got off the plane.”  

A floor in prices   

Dr Keen, who is Associate Professor School of Economics & Finance at the University of Western Sydney, says Australian politicians viewed the trigger of the global financial crisis to be falling house prices in the US, and worked hard to prevent the same wave sweeping Australia.  

  

  The relaxing of foreign investment rules on property took effect in April, exempting temporary residents from giving notice to buy residence for their own use. The rules also relaxed the definition of a “new” home, giving buyers from overseas more choice.  

But the move was only part of the government’s actions to put a floor under housing prices, with Dr Keen singling out the boost to its First Home Owner Buyer’s grant in late 2008 as another major factor stoking demand for real estate.  

In terms of heading off a major price correction, the policies worked. Home prices dipped just 5.5 per cent in the year to the March 2009 quarter, before posting a 13.6 per cent rise in the year to December quarter.  

$100 billion mortgage blow-out   

According to Dr Keen, though, the hangover from the latest real estate binge is going to be a heavy one.  

”The crisis is caused by too much debt and it’s too late to stop too much debt,” said Dr Keen.  

The government stimulus, the investment rules change and low interest rates have combined to swell the country’s mortgage debt by $100 billion more than where it was headed when it began to dip in March 2008, according to numbers Dr Keen delivered in a speech in Melbourne today. (China’s lending rates are typically lower than Australia’s.)  

Had no First Home Owners Buyers’ grant been enacted Dr Keen estimates there to have been a $20 billion reduction in debt.  

Dr Keen said the ratio of mortgage debt to the size of the economy – as measured by gross domestic product – hit 81.29 per cent in March 2008. It then eased to 80.37 per cent by November 2008, before rising to a new record high of 84.28 per cent ”from where it is still rising,” he said.  

Hiking for house prices   

Dr Keen, it must be said, has drawn a legion of critics for his earlier predictions of a house price slump, which were coupled with the sale of his own residence in late 2008 in anticipation of a market collapse. Those predictions included these made earlier this month.  

He also famously lost a wager with Mr Robertson that home prices would be lower one year after September 2008, and so Dr Keen must now hike 224 kilometre from Canberra to Mount Kosciuszko, while wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words ”I was hopelessly wrong on house prices. Ask me how.” The second part of the bet, that home prices will sink by 40 per cent within 15 years, remains live.  

Dr Keen says he plans to begin the trek on April 15, but is undeterred by his detractors.  

”I’m being criticised for being consistent with the rest of the world”, he offers as a defence.  

Now that Australian home prices are rising, the cycle is again under way: prices must continue to climb to prevent a vicious cycle of forced sell-downs and  asset price falls, he said.  

”Normally, once (home prices) go flat, they go down for the simple reason that if they stabilised and people have got themselves geared on rising prices, they’ve got servicing costs that can only be met by selling on a rising market.”  

Further, the overall economy is depending on households borrowing more since business credit remains in the doldrums, he said.  

‘Warders among us’    

Whichever direction house prices go, their growth over time and the ease with which borrowers have been ushered into huge loans by banks have made Australia a ”less equitable society” than it was twenty years ago, Dr Keen said.  

Describing himself both as an optimist and a cynic, Dr Keen compared the banks’ role in people’s lives to the warders of Australia’s penal era.  

The huge amount of money being paid for homes is a ”classic case of a huge inequality and injustice behind the veneer of the fair go.”  

”But the warders are still among us,” he said. ”The warders are working with banks, they got us working as debt slaves and there’s an enormous transfer of wealth as a result.”  

SOURCE: CHRIS ZAPPONE czappone@fairfax.com.au smh.com.au   

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When is Australia’s housing bubble going to burst?

 

What happens when an Aussie housing bubble bursts?

Yes, Virginia, Australia does suffer housing bubbles that burst but, no, Dr Keen, they don’t do it in the Armageddon fashion you imagine. There is enough pain in the reality though to make punters wary of promised riches.

Steve “Doomsday” Keen seems to be making light of losing his forecasting bet to Macquarie strategist Rory Robertson – much to Robertson’s chagrin. But the debunking of Keen’s extreme views shouldn’t blind anyone to the suffering still to be had from a bubble.

The pain potentially extends well beyond those buying houses. Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens made plain during the RBA birthday talkfest that it is a central bank’s duty to lean against a bubble – and he thinks the best way of doing it is to jack up interest rates that inevitably retard the whole economy. And on Friday he left the Parliamentary economics committee in no doubt about which way interest rates are still headed.

 

House prices in south-west Sydney.

The RBA was doing its job by hiking rates four times between May 2002 and December 2003. It still took until mid-2004 for the market to top out with no area feeling it more than what RP Data classifies as Outer South Western Sydney region (see the graph above).

Largely overlooked in the renewed spruiking of the rise and rise of housing prices is the salutary lesson learned the hard way over the past decade in that region. There the bubble didn’t burst spectacularly, a la Keen, but property buyers have been damaged, especially property investors.

Made possible by (relatively) low interest rates, sooled on by often-dodgy investment spruikers and fuelled by intemperate lending, the working-to-middle class south-west seized on the early noughties property boom with a vengeance – a “safe as houses” way of getting rich for those indoctrinated by the negative gearing salesmen.

The early period of the bubble – before it’s obvious there is one – can be rewarding but for those who bought near the top in the first half of 2004, the reality has been six miserable years and a level of forced sales that at times distorted broader Sydney statistics.

As the accompanying graph from RP Data shows, average south west Sydney house prices went down and stayed down from that 2004 peak, barely regaining those levels now. And RPdata research analyst Cameron Kusher says the outer south western Sydney region continues to see a lower level of price growth than the Sydney average.

Add interest charges, the hefty holding costs inherent in real estate and the even worse opportunity cost of the funds tied up in a dud investment, and that $350,000 median house remains an economic disaster.

Even someone buying in mid-2003, a year before the peak when the median price hit $300,000, is still behind. The boom “winners window” wasn’t open for long. It’s not just the stock market that can go flat.

Yet it is something of a testimony to Australians’ dogged belief in home ownership that it wasn’t worse. Among the side issues Keen and his few allies have failed to adequately assess is willingness of Australian property owners to either soldier on servicing their mortgage or take their lumps by selling up before the bank forces them to.

More fundamentally, the core issue for Australian home owners isn’t the relative “expensiveness” of a house or the size of the debt, but the ability of the owner to service that debt.

Rory Robertson put it more bluntly when stung by a reported suggestion that there might be a second leg to his bet against Keen’s dire forecast of an imminent 40 per cent crash in average Australian housing prices, never mind a depression with 15 to 20 per cent unemployment. Dr Keen is preparing to walk from Canberra to Mt Kosciuszko, but still claims that he will be right – one of these years.

“The fact that the downtrend in house prices underway in 2008 ended within a few short months of the bet being agreed, rather than 10-15 years down the track, and with prices then rising to new highs within a year simply highlights how hopelessly wrong Dr Keen was about the outlook for house prices,” writes Robertson.

Looking back, the drop in local house prices from their first quarter 2008 peak was small and short-lived, rather than large and prolonged as anticipated by Dr Keen, mainly because the RBA’s big (and predictable) interest-rate cuts alongside Canberra’s deposit and funding guarantees quickly stabilised confidence and ensured extraordinarily cheap funding for most existing and would-be homebuyers. Counter-cyclical macroeconomic policy worked.

“For the record, the peak-to-trough fall in the ABS house price index was only 5.5%, so Dr Keen was out by a factor of seven!

“House prices on average now are 10% or so higher than in late 2008 when Dr Keen famously sold his home.

“Betting the house on an economist’s forecast typically is not a smart move. Unfortunately, Dr Keen recklessly encouraged everyday Australians to sell their homes at what turned out to be the peak of the global financial crisis and the trough in local house prices.”

Robertson says he has no strong view on the outlook for house prices, seeing both positives and negatives, but believes that extremists will continue to be wrong.

“Those with the strongest views that the price of Australian houses “must” fall typically either don’t own one, don’t really know what they are talking about, or both.”

Yet the south-west Sydney story over the past decade shows a crash doesn’t have to be spectacular to hurt. What might unnerve some is the speed of the price recovery in parts of the Australian housing market was approaching the stuff of bubbles if maintained.

The RBA is pleased to see a slight cooling in home loans and a quiet tightening of loan to valuation ratios by Australia’s banks, a sign perhaps of the banks themselves either taking a hint from the authorities or seeing a potential danger themselves.

As Robertson alludes, extremists of both varieties will be wrong. The RBA thwarted the Doomsday scenario – and it will also do what it must to prevent another asset bubble. We have indeed been warned.

Michael Pascoe is a Business Day contributing editor – and he owns a house.

SOURCE: smh.com.au

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Property BOOM or bust for the next decade in Australia?

Capital City Property Update – John McGrath

What Have Property Prices done in your Capital City?    

John McGrath is a recognised leader in his industry. A peak performance strategist, John has revolutionised the real estate industry here in Australia.

  

With more property investors entering the real estate market this year, a new report from RP Data has provided a timely reminder of the value of real estate investment over the long term.   

While capital growth and yields are both important, capital growth should always be the deciding factor when purchasing a property for investment. According to RP Data, if history is anything to go by then today’s investors can expect at least 10 per cent gains in value per annum. 

Across Australian capital cities, property prices have almost doubled over the past 10 years at an average annualised rate of 9.4 per cent. This includes houses and apartments. Of course, this growth has not been consistent over every year that’s gone by, which lends weight to the theory of long-term investment for greater capital gains. 

Over the past decade, the strongest growth in most cities occurred during the boom between 2000 and 2003. Perth was the last to experience the property boom from 2004 to 2006, during which time its thriving mining sector added to already hot property prices. Things slowed down in Perth in 2007 and Sydney remained steady, while other capitals experienced some gains. 

The GFC slowed the market in 2008 but prices were again robust in 2009 due to the lowest interest rates in 49 years, an undersupply of housing in a climate of strong population growth and first home buyer incentives which led a bottoms-up recovery. 

Now, let’s talk specifics. 

Which city do you think had the greatest rise in property prices over the past 10 years? Was it Sydney, which went gangbusters in 2000-2003? Or Perth, the heartland of our resources boom, which sent property prices skyward in recent years? 

No, it was little Hobart in Tasmania that topped the leader board with an annualised growth rate of 12.8 per cent across all dwelling types. The main reason being that Hobart prices were rising from a very low base. It’s our peak performing capital yet today it is still our most affordable city with a median house price of $330,000 and a median apartment price of $270,750. 

Property prices in our three biggest capitals (by population) – Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, all began at a higher base 10 years ago. These cities have recorded average annualised rates of growth of 6.3 per cent in Sydney, 9.7 per cent in Melbourne and 11 per cent in Brisbane (houses and apartments). 

The critical issue affecting property prices over the next decade is the undersupply of housing across the nation. Our population is growing at a historically high rate and there’s no reason for it to slow down, unless our immigration policies change and we allow fewer people into the country. This is unlikely as one of the primary reasons for welcoming migrants into Australia is to provide skilled workers in employment sectors where we are falling short. 

At this stage, many state governments are unwilling or unable to free up new land with the necessary infrastructure to support new communities and new housing construction. So the undersupply will continue to grow, and when demand outweighs supply, property prices go up – simple as that. This is great news for investors as they should be able to rely on steady healthy rental yields and steady consistent capital gains from now to 2020. 

My advice? Buy good quality investment properties with a long-term view. 

Important information: This content has been prepared without taking account of the objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular individual. It does not constitute formal advice. For this reason, any individual should, before acting, consider the appropriateness of the information, having regard to the individual’s objectives, financial situation and needs and, if necessary, seek appropriate professional advice.     

As a speaker in the corporate world, John McGrath has impacted the lives of many business people through his passion, ideas and inspiration. John advises a number of large business groups. He believes success and greatness can be achieved through a systematic approach that can be simply and quickly taught to others. A powerful speaker, John will innovate and drive results at your event. http://www.platinumspeakers.com.au/speaker508-John-McGrath      

John McGrath can be engaged through Platinum Speakers and Entertainers – www.platinumspeakers.com.au or by contacting our office on 03 9673 7400.      

SOURCE: prwire.com.au     

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There are many many opinions on Australian housing prices, here is another one!

Web alert – warning on ‘crazy’ house prices

One of the most outspoken sceptics of Australian property prices has launched a new effort to raise awareness of “crazy” housing prices and policies.

In an effort to turn losing a bet about a local housing bubble into winning more followers, University of Western Sydney associate professor of economics Steve Keen has unveiled keenwalk.com.au.

Predicting the bubble’s pop is bad for your mental health

The site will highlight the 224-kilometre journey on foot from Parliament House in Canberra to Mount Kosciuszko in the Snowy Mountains he is making in April, after losing a wager with Macquarie Bank analyst Rory Robertson that home prices would fall 40 per cent from peak to trough in a year. 

Have you been priced out of the market? Email czappone@fairfax.com.au

Professor Keen will wear a T-shirt with the words, “I was hopelessly wrong on house prices. Ask me how.”

Last year, capital city house prices rose by 12.1 per cent, hitting a new high, as demand from first-home buyers sparked a revival at the lower end of the market, while Australia’s strong economy bolstered the top end.

Undaunted, Professor Keen is asking members of the public who “agree that Australia’s housing prices and policies are crazy” to join him for 15-kilometre stretches of the walk, expected to take him eight days in total.

The site will also raise money for the Swags for Homeless charity, which distributes weatherproof swags to Australia’s 16,000 homeless.

“I’m happy to walk from Parliament House to Mount Kosciuszko if I can draw attention to the absurdity of basing economic policy on making housing more unaffordable,” Professor Keen said.

He also reminded Mr Robertson that the second part of the bet – whether Australian home prices would drop 40 per cent over 10 to 15 years – “is still alive and well”.

“Rory may yet have to follow in my footsteps,” he said.

Mr Robertson said in November that if Australian house prices ever fell by 40 per cent from any peak in his lifetime, he would follow in Professor Keen’s footsteps.

Professor Keen said the main reason home prices surged in 2009 was the government’s first-home owners’ grant boost, which had created a caste of “sacrificial lambs of Australia’s so far successful evasion of the GFC”.

He pointed to a recent Fujitsu Consulting study, which predicted that 40 per cent of the 250,000 first-time buyers who entered the market in the past year and a half were experiencing some degree of mortgage stress, with that share expected to rise to 47 per cent by December.

Fujitsu describes mild mortgage stress as borrowers reprioritising their bills or borrowing more from other sources in order to maintain their home loan repayments. In more severe mortgage stress cases, borrowers are forced to refinance loans or sell their homes.

However, Mr Robertson again warned against too much pessimism.

“Betting the house on an economist’s forecast typically is not a smart move,” Mr Robertson said today. “Unfortunately, Dr Keen recklessly encouraged everyday Australians to sell their homes at what turned out to be the peak of the global financial crisis, and the trough in local house prices.”

SOURCE: CHRIS ZAPPONE smh.com.au

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It seems like musical chairs… So, when will the property bubble burst in Australia?

 

Predicting when the property bubble will pop is bad for your mental health

PROPERTY bubbles suspend laws of supply and demand. In markets for widgets, demand goes down when the price goes up. With real estate, it’s the other way around. Higher prices lead to more demand as people seek to profit from the boom; property prices go up and potential buyers expect further increases, so they are willing to pay more. Maybe these laws are also inverted for other asset bubbles but the combination of leverage and low-priced finance leaves housing markets chronically vulnerable.

This latest property bubble has been going since 1999, and it is reassuring that Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens has signaled rate rises, telling a meeting of bankers, business leaders and bureaucrats last week that central banks had contributed to the housing bubble that had plunged the world into recession. But will it work?

Three rate rises last year did not ease the property bubble and in any case, prices do not necessarily move inversely with rates. Remember the property booms in the early 1970s and ’80s when interest rates were relatively high?

Yale economist Robert Shiller says asset bubbles can be diagnosed the same way one would diagnose mental illness. Bubble symptoms include sharp increases in the price of an asset considerably higher than its underlying value; great public excitement; media frenzy; stories of people earning lots, causing envy among those who aren’t; growing interest in the asset class among the public where, for example, taxi drivers start talking to you about shares or property investments, and ”new-era” theories to justify unprecedented price increases.

Bubbles tipped to burst this year include China, gold, US Treasury bonds and, according to the Melbourne-based Land Values Research Group, Australian property.

LVRG director Gavin Putland puts it bluntly: “It’s months rather than a year, but how many months is hard to say because it’s so irrational and being irrational by definition makes it hard to predict. But reality must assert itself.”

If he is right, it will be a shock to many. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the idea that homes and flats were fabulous investments took hold of the public imagination. Hence the frenzy. Newspapers in recent weeks have been fuelling the excitement, running pieces about half of Sydney’s home owners becoming millionaires by 2020 and sitting on a daily $766 average increase in the value of their properties.

Still, many say the bubble won’t pop. BIS Shrapnel estimates that falling unemployment and continuing high levels of migration mean that a price correction is unlikely. Add to that a chronic housing shortage in Australia and the company says values could rise by as much as 11.8 per cent in Melbourne and 5.5 per cent in Sydney this year. The collapse of property prices in Japan, the United States and Britain disproves the seductive premise that property prices must always increase.

Aside from the cycle, some external shocks could pop the bubble. The contagion from European economies in crisis could raise the price of money and push up rates here as our big banks raise much of their funding in overseas markets.

And then there is the prospect of China’s bubble popping. Jim Chanos, the hedge fund manager who was the first to tip the Enron disaster, has predicted that China’s emerging real estate sector looks like ”Dubai times 1000, or worse”. When, or if, China pops, it will have an impact on Australia’s market.

Shiller says society needs mechanisms to let air out of property bubbles, something more than interest rates. These include home-equity insurance and new markets selling real estate futures with the potential to tame speculative bubbles.

At the same time, he concedes that bubbles might be impossible to stop as they are what make us human. ”When it comes to market bubbles and how they are created, very little, if anything, has changed. This is because human psychology has not changed,” he writes.

When it pops, Shiller would say, it will be the result of herd behaviour and boundless credit, all part of management dogma and modern finance. Some might call it a failure of business as usual.

theage.com.au

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We look at the most expensive property in Australia to see how it preformed during 2009…

Despite the fact dwelling values climbed 11.1% during 2009 the story was much different across different price points and markets, with more expensive properties generally seeing the strongest growth.

During 2009 the residential property market rebounded well following a peak to trough fall in property values of 3.8% between February 2008 and December 2008.

On a national basis, the top 20% of most expensive postcodes have recorded the strongest property value growth during 2009 increasing by 11.9% during the year. Meanwhile the middle 60% of postcodes nationwide have seen property values grow by 11.8% and the 20% of most affordable postcodes have recorded value growth of a much lower 8.2%.

The most interesting detail of these results is that the recovery was initially led by the most affordable end of the market which recorded value growth of 3.9% during the 1st quarter of 2009 which cooled to 0.0% value growth during the 4th quarter. Meanwhile the top 20% of postcodes recorded the strongest rate of growth during the 2nd (3.4%) and 3rd (4.1%) quarters whilst the middle 60% of postcodes recorded the strongest growth during the final quarter of 2009 (2.7%).

On a capital city basis across Australia’s five largest cities the performance across the three market segments has varied during the last five years.

Sydney
The top 20% of postcodes have recorded value growth of 12.5% with the middle market recording 11.8% growth and the lower end seeing growth of 9.1% during 2009. Taking a more historical view, the strongest growth in values has consistently been recorded across the top 20% of properties in fact, during each year except 2008 the most expensive suburbs have recorded the strongest value growth whilst the most affordable 20% have consistently underperformed more expensive property.

Melbourne
The top 20% of postcodes have recorded value growth of 16.9% during 2009 as has the middle market whilst the lower end recorded growth of 12.3%. Like Sydney, the top 20% of sales have consistently recorded the strongest annual growth in values over the last five years with 2008 being the lone exception when values fell -9.0%. The most affordable properties are the ones which have consistently witnessed the lowest level of annual value growth.

Brisbane
During 2009, the top 20% of postcodes have recorded value growth of 13.9%, whilst the middle market has recorded growth of 7.6% and the lower end has recorded minimal growth of 2.5%. On an annualised basis over five years the most expensive properties have generally recorded the strongest level of value growth and the middle 60% of sales has generally seen the lowest value growth.

Perth
Perth has performed vastly different from the east coast markets over recent years. During 2009 the top 20% of postcodes witnessed the lowest level of growth (1.0%) whilst the lower end has recorded growth of 4.6% and the middle market has been the standout performer with 9.2% value growth. Perth has been a bit of a mixed bag: in 2005, 2006 and 2009 lower priced stock was the best performer, in 2007 higher priced stock performed the strongest and in 2008 it was the middle end of the market performing strongest.

Adelaide
Like Perth, Adelaide hasn’t followed the trends of the east coast markets during the last year with the top 20% seeing the lowest level of growth (5.4%) whilst the middle market has recorded growth of 6.0% and the lower end market has been the standout performer with 6.6% growth. Over the last five years, the middle 60 percent of suburbs has generally recorded the strongest annual value growth and the most expensive suburbs have generally recorded the lowest level of value growth.

The results highlight that although macro trends may show one thing, the reality in any given area can be quite different. The results also highlight just how quickly market dynamics can change over the course of a timeframe of as little as just one quarter. Cities on the Eastern Seaboard tend to witness the most expensive properties generally recording the strongest value growth but this market is also susceptible to largest falls (higher risk better return). Meanwhile in Perth and Adelaide the last five years has seen strongest value growth generally recorded amongst more affordable markets.

SOURCE: Tim Lawless is the Director of Property Research at RP Data smartcompany.com.au

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Do the most expensive properties show the most growth? We take a closer look at Pricey postcodes!

Despite the fact dwelling values climbed 11.1% during 2009 the story was much different across different price points and markets, with more expensive properties generally seeing the strongest growth.

During 2009 the residential property market rebounded well following a peak to trough fall in property values of 3.8% between February 2008 and December 2008.

On a national basis, the top 20% of most expensive postcodes have recorded the strongest property value growth during 2009 increasing by 11.9% during the year. Meanwhile the middle 60% of postcodes nationwide have seen property values grow by 11.8% and the 20% of most affordable postcodes have recorded value growth of a much lower 8.2%.

The most interesting detail of these results is that the recovery was initially led by the most affordable end of the market which recorded value growth of 3.9% during the 1st quarter of 2009 which cooled to 0.0% value growth during the 4th quarter. Meanwhile the top 20% of postcodes recorded the strongest rate of growth during the 2nd (3.4%) and 3rd (4.1%) quarters whilst the middle 60% of postcodes recorded the strongest growth during the final quarter of 2009 (2.7%).

On a capital city basis across Australia’s five largest cities the performance across the three market segments has varied during the last five years.

Sydney
The top 20% of postcodes have recorded value growth of 12.5% with the middle market recording 11.8% growth and the lower end seeing growth of 9.1% during 2009. Taking a more historical view, the strongest growth in values has consistently been recorded across the top 20% of properties in fact, during each year except 2008 the most expensive suburbs have recorded the strongest value growth whilst the most affordable 20% have consistently underperformed more expensive property.

Melbourne
The top 20% of postcodes have recorded value growth of 16.9% during 2009 as has the middle market whilst the lower end recorded growth of 12.3%. Like Sydney, the top 20% of sales have consistently recorded the strongest annual growth in values over the last five years with 2008 being the lone exception when values fell -9.0%. The most affordable properties are the ones which have consistently witnessed the lowest level of annual value growth.

Brisbane
During 2009, the top 20% of postcodes have recorded value growth of 13.9%, whilst the middle market has recorded growth of 7.6% and the lower end has recorded minimal growth of 2.5%. On an annualised basis over five years the most expensive properties have generally recorded the strongest level of value growth and the middle 60% of sales has generally seen the lowest value growth.

Perth
Perth has performed vastly different from the east coast markets over recent years. During 2009 the top 20% of postcodes witnessed the lowest level of growth (1.0%) whilst the lower end has recorded growth of 4.6% and the middle market has been the standout performer with 9.2% value growth. Perth has been a bit of a mixed bag: in 2005, 2006 and 2009 lower priced stock was the best performer, in 2007 higher priced stock performed the strongest and in 2008 it was the middle end of the market performing strongest.

Adelaide
Like Perth, Adelaide hasn’t followed the trends of the east coast markets during the last year with the top 20% seeing the lowest level of growth (5.4%) whilst the middle market has recorded growth of 6.0% and the lower end market has been the standout performer with 6.6% growth. Over the last five years, the middle 60 percent of suburbs has generally recorded the strongest annual value growth and the most expensive suburbs have generally recorded the lowest level of value growth.

The results highlight that although macro trends may show one thing, the reality in any given area can be quite different. The results also highlight just how quickly market dynamics can change over the course of a timeframe of as little as just one quarter. Cities on the Eastern Seaboard tend to witness the most expensive properties generally recording the strongest value growth but this market is also susceptible to largest falls (higher risk better return). Meanwhile in Perth and Adelaide the last five years has seen strongest value growth generally recorded amongst more affordable markets.

SOURCE: Tim Lawless is the Director of Property Research at RP Data smartcompany.com.au

Contact Scott Banks on 1300 537 274 or by email scott@scottbanks.com.au for your FREE report Property investing is confusing, BAD decisions can cost you thousands!   

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Australian capital city house prices for the last decade…

A decade in review

Across the capital city residential property market, the last 10 years has seen home values almost double with an annual rate of growth of 9.4%. Today the capital city median dwelling price across the country sits at $451,000 with houses recording a median of $485,000 and units at $400,000. If you bought a home 10 years ago, you were probably looking at a median price of less than $200,000 for either property type.

As the capital city market pricing graph shows, there has been distinctive periods of growth during the last decade. Between 2000 and 2003 there was a strong growth period which was following a long period of negligible value growth. Following this boom, values nationally showed little growth again until 2007.

In fact, the majority of value growth recorded between 2004 and 2007 was due to the Perth market which was undergoing a significant surge in values due to unprecedented strength in the mining and resources sector.

Conversely, in parts of Western Sydney in particular, some areas recorded significant falls in property values over this period. During 2007 there was another strong growth period which occurred in all cities except Perth and Sydney.

During 2008, the global economy stalled as a result of the global financial crisis and values slumped 3.8% nationally from their peak during February 2008 to the trough in December 2008. Larger falls were recorded in Perth and Brisbane. In 2009 property values jumped again, this time in all cities as a result of the lowest interest rates in 49 years which has lured buyers back into the market, the boost to the first home buyers grant and a dramatic housing undersupply.

Over the decade, sales volumes were strongest between 2001 and early 2004, which was the time that nationally, property values were undergoing significant growth. Once the slowdown hit in mid-2004 volumes dropped by around 10,000 sales each month as the market cooled.

During 2007 when markets such as Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Hobart and Darwin were performing particularly well, volumes again picked up but never reached those heights witnessed between 2001 and 2004. Once the GFC hit, sales volumes slumped to the lowest levels seen at any time over the last 10 years. It’s not surprising as many with non-core assets such as holiday homes were forced to sell, as did some of those who lost their jobs or ran into financial difficulty. At this time there was plenty of willing sellers however, the problem was a significant lack of willing buyers at that time.

Finally in 2009, as values rebounded and recorded growth only slightly below that recorded during 2007, sales volumes rebounded, although not to the same levels as those recorded during 2007.

On a city-by-city basis Hobart has actually seen the greatest value growth over the last 10 years, with dwelling values increasing on average by 12.8% annually (to November 2009). It’s no real coincidence given that Hobart prices came from a very low base. Despite this, Hobart still provides the most affordable capital city housing.

What is probably most interesting is the performance of the three largest cities (population wise). Sydney prices have dramatically underperformed the national average with average annual growth in dwelling values of just 6.3%. Melbourne has only just outperformed the national average seeing average annual growth of 9.7%, while Brisbane has recorded growth of 11.0% p.a. The national figure is weighted by population and property type so given this it is clearly influenced by the larger population centre’s such as Sydney and Melbourne.

It’s also imperative to remember that Sydney and Melbourne have had higher property prices and because of this fact growth rates tend to be lower as they are coming from a higher base.

Looking specifically at the last five years, values have grown at an average annual rate of 6.5% which is much lower than the 10 year growth rate, showing just how significant the boom was in the early part of the decade.

Over the last five years the standout performers have been: Darwin (17.2% p.a), Perth (13.6% p.a) and Adelaide (8.4% p.a). Sydney has by far and away been the worst performer during the last five years, recording average annual growth of 2.3% p.a. The other poorer performing markets have been Hobart (6.8%) and Brisbane (7.5%).

Given what has occurred over the last 10 years it will be very interesting to see what the next 10 years holds. Undoubtedly, property prices are expensive in most capital cities and the provision of affordable housing must be imperative.

However, it appears that to-date governments are unwilling or unable to provide affordable land supply with the necessary infrastructure. As population growth looks set to remain at high levels and we continue to fail to build enough dwellings to cater for demand, upwards price pressures on property is likely to persist.

SOURCE: smartcompany.com.au Tim Lawless is the Director of Property Research at RP Data.

Contact Scott Banks on 1300 537 274 or by email scott@scottbanks.com.au for your FREE report ‘Property investing is confusing, BAD decisions can cost you thousands!   

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Lower unemployment rates will help keep house prices on the boil, says bank

THE National Australia Bank has backed away from its forecast of a 5 per cent decline in property prices this year, and now says lower unemployment levels will prompt a 5 per cent rise.

”The combination of lower unemployment, low interest rates, undersupply of housing and the first-home owners’ boost acted to significantly increase house prices – and hence consumer wealth,” a NAB economist, Alan Oster, said.

”While lower hours worked have reduced incomes and slowed consumption, the impact is still much less than would have occurred in the face of large-scale job shedding.

”Population growth, real rates, unemployment, and the state of the building cycle suggests that house prices will probably increase by around 5 per cent in 2010 and 2011, whereas our previous projections of unemployment rising to 6.25 per cent would have implied falls of around minus 5 per cent,” Mr Oster said.

It is still early days, but almost all economic commentators predict another resilient year for Sydney property despite looming interest rates rises. The consensus is for house price growth of between 5 and 10 per cent.

The most robust forecast was a 20 per cent gain from Mark Armstrong, the chief executive of Property Planning Australia, who suggests an investor-driven growth cycle will lead to continued double-digit price growth.

With NAB’s forecast reversal, there is almost no contrarian view suggesting there is a prospect of price falls. An economist at AMP Capital, Dr Shane Oliver, said average prices were likely to rise about 5 per cent, although he suggested low-end house prices could fall modestly.

A BIS Shrapnel economist, Jason Anderson, expects Sydney’s median house price to rise about 7 per cent during the year, as strengthening investor demand offsets the smaller number of first-home buyers.

A real estate strategist at Macquarie Capital Advisers, Rod Cornish, said mortgage rates tended to affect housing markets with a six- to nine-month lag, so rate rises that have occurred since October should affect the rate of price growth about midway through the year.

SOURCE: JONATHAN CHANCELLOR smh.com.au

Contact Scott Banks on 1300 537 274 or by email scott@scottbanks.com.au for your FREE report ‘Property investing is confusing, BAD decisions can cost you thousands.

Where is Australia’s housing market REALLY heading?

 

 

Overheated or undervalued? A powerful part of the Australian economy or a bubble that could burst and damage Australia’s miracle economy? 

Australia’s housing market has always been one of the most talked-about sectors of the economy, but the recent surge in property prices – against the backdrop of the subprime crisis and the implosion of housing markets overseas – has further emphasised the divisions between the property bears and the property bulls.

The bears argue Australia’s house prices are far too high when incomes and debt levels are taken into account and believe the bubble must burst – and spectacularly.

The bulls argue a shortage of housing and Australia’s growing population means property prices will continue to rise, albeit at a lower rate.

It’s a complex and sometimes controversial area, so let’s explore the issues with a feature-length SmartCompany Q&A.

I’m feeling pretty darn good about house prices right now. We’ve just come out of a great 2009, haven’t we?

Unquestionably. After a year in which it looked like the entire financial system was teetering on the brink, Australian house prices surged, helped in no small part by the fact interest rates remained at historical lows for a big chunk of the year and the Government’s decision to boost the first home owners grant to $14,000 for established homes and $21,000 for new homes in late 2008 (this was extended in the May Federal Budget).

There are three main measures that we follow for the latest on house prices: the official Australian Bureau of Statistics figures, data from Australian Property Monitors and the RP Data-Rismark Index.

While there are differences between the three measures, they all tell a similar story about national house price growth over 2009. The ABS said it was 13.6%, APM showed growth of 12.1% and RP Data-Rismark was lowest at 11.5%.

In other words, a very good year. Here are the AMP results for each capital city, for houses and units:

Looks great for me. But tell me, why on earth do we need three different measures of house prices? All sounds a bit confusing.

The use of three different measures can be a little confusing and there has even been a bit of sniping between the representatives of the various companies. Essentially, the ABS and APM track median prices, while RP-Data-Rismark use something called a “hedonic” index, which it says more accurately tracks actual capital growth in housing.

This is because, as Rismark chief Christopher Joye pointed out in a media release he shot out after APM’s latest results were released, the median measures can be affected by changes in market conditions. For example, Joye argues a big jump in the figures for the December quarter (up 4.8% according to APM) was skewed by the fact first home buyers were leaving the market as the grant was wound back and upgraders were entering the market, buying more expensive homes.

And what does APM say?

That its “stratified media price” methodology has been developed in conjunction with the RBA.

So should I believe one over the other?

No, take both into account when trying to assess the market.

However, the argy bargy in the last week or so did highlight some sharp differences in the way these two groups see the market heading into the new selling year.

The sharp 4.8% rise in median prices in the December quarter – particularly the 6.4% jump in Melbourne, the 5.3% rise in Sydney and the 6.4% increase in Hobart – have some commentators wondering if sections of the market are starting to look a little overheated.

However, the RP Data-Rismark index showed house price growth slowing in the month of December, with prices down 0.3%. Over the quarter, RP Data-Rismark saw prices up 2.1%.

There’s a big difference between those figures, isn’t there?

Sure is. On the RP Data-Rismark measure, the market’s bubbling along nicely. On the APM data, there is reason for some concern.

That concern is underlined by another set of house prices figures…

What, another set of figures?

…Yes, another set, this time from the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, which look at Melbourne. It’s a good snapshot of a market that does appear to be white hot. The median price of a Melbourne house reached $540,500 as of December 31, representing an increase of 15% during the quarter.

Some suburbs recorded unusually high rises. In the eastern suburbs, the median price of a home in Burwood, increased by 23% to $810,000 in just three months, while prices in the suburb of Ringwood grew 16%.

That’s huge growth in just three months.

But are these markets overheated?

You’d have to say that the suburbs above are overheated. But the real question is, will these over-sized price rises spread throughout the market? And that’s where opinions differ.

Matthew Bell, economist for Australian Property Monitors, told SmartCompany some areas of the country are undoubtedly recording overheated rises.

“The reasons behind these rises I view from a very macro level. It’s a supply and demand issue, and there are definitely areas where prices will have been overbid and they are much more susceptible to things like the first home owners incentive.”

“Of course, easier credit and lower interest rates are factors, but I think you can’t discount the undersupply and strong population growth and I think we’ve just had good growth for a long period of time.”

Louis Christopher, founder of property research firm SQM Research, told us that there are suburbs which are anomalies.

“We’ve got to be careful, because we have no doubt seen some rises and some areas have been stronger than others. This is an anomaly. These areas have risen faster than the overall market for a number of reasons, the suburbs could be more popular, more people want to live there for whatever reasons, etc. A combination of factors.”

In other words, there are suburbs we need to watch out for?

Absolutely. Buyers really need to do their research, particularly in Melbourne where prices jumped 18.5% last year, according to APM. That market looks very warm right now.

What about the outlook for house prices going forward? You’ve got me a little worried with all this overheated talk.

You’re not the only one worried – this is an issue that has even vexed the Governor of the RBA, Glenn Stevens. Here’s what he said back in July, since when housing prices have only climbed:

“A very real challenge in the near-term is the following: how to ensure that the ready availability and low cost of housing finance is translated into more dwellings, not just higher prices. Given the circumstances – the economy moving to a position of less than full employment, with labour shortages lessening and reduced pressure on prices for raw material inputs – this ought to be the time when we can add to the dwelling stock without a major run-up in prices.”

“If we fail to do that – if all we end up with is higher prices and not many more dwellings – then it will be very disappointing, indeed quite disturbing. Not only would it confirm that there are serious supply-side impediments to producing one of the things that previous generations of Australians have taken for granted, namely affordable shelter, it would also pose elevated risks of problems of over-leverage and asset price deflation down the track.”

Stevens can’t be put in the category of a property bear, but his concerns do highlight a few of the issues confronting the sector.

What else are the doomsayers worried about?

There are two main things: the debt levels of Australian household and the difference between house prices and incomes.

Dr Steve Keen, Associate Professor of Economics & Finance at the University of Western Sydney, is one of Australia’s biggest housing bears – he famously predicted house prices could fall by as much as 40% last year, a claim that has been proven to be very wrong.

But Keen is a close watcher of the level of debt carried by Australian households. Here is a graph from his Debt Watch blog that shows how Australia’s debt level as relative to GDP has doubled in the last decade, mainly due to borrowing for homes.

What Keen fears is a huge period of deleveraging when Australian households start to feel that they are simply carrying too much debt.

“When debt is as high as it is now — literally 100% of GDP for households and another 60% for businesses — then deleveraging can cause a dramatic fall in demand,” he writes.

He argues that drop in demand will also bring house prices down with it, and says this process was delayed last year by the Government’s first home owners grant, which has since been wound back.

Does Keen have a point?

The state of Australia’s household balance sheets is bubbling along in the background as a real problem, particularly if unemployment was to jump, if rates were to rise very quickly or, as Keen argues, if households were to begin deleveraging. The issue is, it’s tough to see what causes those things to start happening at the moment.

What else are the bears worried about?

How expensive Australian house prices are. This question, measured typically by the ratio of house prices to household income is one of the most fiercely debated questions in the property sector.

There appears to be reasonable agreement that the long-term average for Australian house prices is about 3x household income.

But the current ratio is more contentious. Many commentators say the ratio is 7-8x. Using the APM city house price median of $525,000, the ratio is around 5.8x.

But Christopher Joye of Rismark says the ratio is a much lower 4.1x – largely unchanged over the last six years. He gets this figure by using a median of around $370,000, which is based on all dwelling types (houses, units, terraces) across all of Australia (including regional areas, as this is where 40% of Australia’s housing stock is).

So there is an argument to say Australian housing remains affordable?

Sure, although income is only one reason of the measures of affordability – interest rates and bank loan-to-value ratios are also important. And there are plenty – including the Housing Industry Association – who have some big concerns about affordability levels, particularly if rates continue to rise as expected this year.

Are there any other good signs for house prices?

Perhaps the best sign is what economists like to call the “fundamentals” of the market – that is, that demand for housing is far higher than supply. Put simply, Australia is not building enough houses to meet the demand from a growing population and migration. Paul Braddick, head of property and financial system research at ANZ, summed this argument up in the bank’s recent property outlook.

“Each day underlying housing demand remains above new supply, the market tightens further. We estimate that underlying housing demand is running at an annual rate of 200,000 while dwelling completions are expected to fall to under 130,000 in 2009-10.

“With the market already extremely tight (reflected in near record low rental vacancy rates in most state capitals), an additional shortfall of 70,000 dwellings will have a marked impact. The nascent recovery in dwelling approvals will partially close the gap in 2010-11, however, it remains highly unlikely that annual completions will get anywhere near the 200,000 required to meet demand in the foreseeable future.”

Sounds like a very positive long-term trend, but I thought SmartCompany had a story the other day raising some questions about this housing shortage issue.

We did. Brendan Darcy, chief executive of property information provider Hometrack, told us too many analysts look at the housing supply issue and do not consider other factors putting upward pressure on prices, such as the availability of credit.

Darcy points to the Government’s National Housing Supply Council State of Supply Report 2008, which notes 85,000 extra dwellings are required to ease the housing problem. However, 9,000 of these are stated as being set aside for people who are sleeping rough, with a further 35,000 dwellings needed for people staying with friends or relatives.

These people clearly need homes but they are not necessarily in the market to buy a home. So the question is whether they should be taken into account when we are talking about how the housing shortage relates to house prices – probably not.

Data from Louis Christopher’s SQM also showed rental vacancy rates actually rose last year, also suggesting the shortage might not be as bad as some think.

The point is that while there is a housing shortage, nailing down its exact size isn’t easy.

Okay, so what were likely to see house prices do in 2010?

For all the differences of opinion in the housing sector, this is one area there seems to be general agreement on. Most commentators are expecting that prices will ease as the first home buyers leave the market and interest rates rise, making households more cautious. Craig James at CommSec is predicting a rise of 8-10% across the year, while ANZ economist Alex Joiner is tipping 5-8%.

What about over the longer term?

That’s a very tough question. House prices generally tumble when high unemployment and high interest rates force people to sell their homes, but it is difficult to see either of these things happening. The Australian economy is relatively strong, unemployment is coming down and rates, while rising, remain at historically low levels. The housing shortage (while questions remain about its size) should also help support the market.

But question marks do remain about housing affordability, particularly in places like Melbourne, where the market has run very hard in the last two years.

The huge level of debt held by Australian households also is something of a dark cloud on the horizon. As rates rise, how will households react? Particularly the 135,000 first home buyers who have bought into the last 12 months? And if house prices do keep rising, will our banks start to become increasingly concerned about the mortgage market (some have recently tightened lending criteria)?

The scenario that most commentators are predicting over the next 12 months – the market cooling slightly as rates rise and the stimulus of the first home owners grant fades – would be a welcome one and would do much to dispel any fears that we’ve got a housing bubble building.

But if house prices continue to climb at the rates seen last year, concerns about debt, affordability and overheating will only grow.

 SOURCE: James Thomson smartcompany.com.au

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Tips on how to pick the next BOOM locations in Australian property

Read the news to see where to invest in property

WANT to know how to exploit investment opportunities this year? Take several large steps backwards.

Investors fail to see the best opportunities to buy or develop growth real estate because they look too “micro”. The bigger picture is more important. But they can’t see the suburb for the houses.

Many investors put their energies into scrutinising the property to buy. That’s important — but where they buy is more important than what they buy.

Most crucial of all is the rationale supporting the where.

To get investment right, punters need to know about matters that, at first glance, appear to have little relevance. Here’s an example. Kevin Rudd made a speech to an Australia Day reception in which he said his government planned to “radically invest” in infrastructure.

The Prime Minister said the “core challenge” for the government was dealing with economic problems created by an ageing population, with a quarter of Australians predicted to be over 65 by 2050.

“We need to grow the economy faster by boosting the productivity of our economy,” he said. “That is the only solution forward for Australia.”

He proposes to achieve this by investing rapidly in infrastructure, in skills and in education and training. He cited multi-billion-dollar investments in a national broadband network, road and rail construction, education and health as examples of where the federal government would spend heavily over the next few years.

Political rhetoric is not a solid foundation for an investment strategy, but we know from recent experience that this government is willing to go deeply into deficit to fund infrastructure.

This is highly relevant to property investors and developers as few things create real estate growth more than new infrastructure.

A $150 million expansion of Nambour Hospital on the Sunshine Coast is an example of a relatively small infrastructure project that ripples through the local economy.

It’s regarded as a lifesaver for the local building and construction industry still recovering from the downturn.

The project improves local services, creates jobs (220 construction workers on site every day) and provides business for local tradespeople and suppliers, and generates demand for housing.

Given that the new building will house an expanded outpatients clinic, renal chairs, antenatal and pediatric clinics, special care nursery and pediatric ward, general wards and a purpose-built respiratory-infectious diseases ward, there will be new jobs in its operation.

Property investors might see a headline about growth in the aerospace industry near Ipswich and turn the page.

But they should be interested. Ipswich, in the growth corridor extending southwest from Brisbane, is expected to become the nation’s epicentre of aerospace when the next phase of RAAF Base Amberley is constructed.

The project is predicted to bring thousands of jobs to Ipswich when construction begins in 2012. The KoBold Group says it will position Ipswich as a global leader in aerospace and defence industries. Executive manager of KoBold Group Jeff Budgen says: “It will bring hundreds of millions of dollars to the Ipswich region.”

Federal member for Blair Shayne Neumann goes further. He says the centre may be worth billions of dollars to the Ipswich economy. The state government has committed $30m towards its construction.

Adelaide is alive with infrastructure projects, including a desalination plant, a redevelopment of Adelaide Oval and new police headquarters to house 1000 staff.

A $120m upgrade of the former Submarine Corporation shipyard at Osborne sounds of little significance, but it’s huge for Adelaide.

The upgraded ASC facility will be the key construction site in the federal government’s $8 billion air warfare destroyer program.

This project involves the work of 50 companies, subcontractors and suppliers, and represents the biggest defence project undertaken in Australia.

The $3.5bn desalination plant being built on Victoria’s east coast has hundreds of workers on site, and reports suggest this has led to a rise in real estate prices and rents in neighbouring towns such as Wonthaggi.

I see a big future in Newcastle real estate thanks to expanding infrastructure related to resources and power generation. Another scrap of news relevant to investors is the plan announced by the University of Newcastle to become a multi-campus mega university by 2020, increasing its student population by a third to 40,000, making it one of the nation’s top three regional universities.

SOURCE: The Australian Terry Ryder is the founder of  hotspotting.com.au

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‘Upgraders’ push house prices higher in Australia

House prices at all-time high, survey shows

Population growth, rising incomes and a shortage of housing have pushed property prices to all-time highs

  • Biggest jump in prices since 2003
  • Expensive properties driving growth
  • Higher incomes, population boost prices

HOUSE prices are at all time highs in most capitals after more buying in expensive suburbs drove the strongest annual price growth in seven years.

The medium-to-long-term outlook for property prices remains strong as the population grows, incomes rise and demand for houses outstrips new supply, says an Australian Property Monitors’ report.

Despite a sluggish start, 2009 ended with the biggest price growth since 2003 on a rise in activity at the top end of the market, the APM December quarterly report released on Thursday says.

Median national house prices rose 4.8 per cent in the December quarter, bringing the rise for 2009 to 12.1 per cent.

Melbourne’s prices jumped 18.5 per cent for the year, past the $500,000 mark for the first time.

Sydney’s median house prices rose 12.1 per cent over the year, while Perth’s annual growth was 8.7 per cent to back over $500,000, a level not seen since March 2008, APM said.

Hobart was the second strongest market nationally with median house prices rising over 14 per cent in 2009 while prices in Darwin lifted 13.5 per cent and Brisbane’s 7.7 per cent.

Adelaide remains the most affordable capital after posting the slowest median annual growth for houses at 2.4 per cent.

First-home buyers sustained the market in the early part of the year, but “upgraders” and investors ultimately drove the market, AMP says.

Activity in more expensive suburbs benefited from the resilient jobs market in late 2009 and the rising share market.

“The price growth seen in the more expensive suburbs in 2009 has largely been a recovery of the price falls that have occurred since late 2007 and early 2008,” APM economist Matthew Bell said.

“This top-end recovery has been completed in most capitals with median house prices surpassing pre-global financial crisis highs for the first time in the December quarter in Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.”

Mr Bell said rising interest rates and the expiry of the first home-owner boost at the end of December would slow activity for first-home buyers.

Median unit prices in capitals did not follow the housing trend over 2009.

Darwin units were up 22.8 per cent over 2009, Perth was next with 15.8 per cent growth then Hobart with 14.6 per cent.

SOURCE: www.news.com.au/money/property

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