Monday, September 3, 2012

Australian Capital Cities: Where's Hot, Where's Not


DARWIN was Australia's best-performing capital city for property values during the past quarter - up 5.2 per cent - and showing year-on-year growth of 4.2 per cent, according to the latest figures from RP Data.

The RP Data-Rismark August Hedonic index shows Adelaide is the weakest performing capital city, with the change in dwelling values sliding 2.2 per cent during the past three months.

The monthly figures were more optimistic though for Adelaide, showing 1.4 per cent growth for August.

Sydney and Melbourne both recorded only 0.1 per cent growth for the month, but are performing better for the quarter, at 2.4 per cent and 2.5 per cent respectively.

RP Data research director Tim Lawless, said the figures showed a flat winter season that could be the foundation of a strengthening Spring.

Combined with the lowest transaction levels since the late 1990s, prices could also soon be expected to drift upwards after years in the doldrums.

"Spring is going to be better than last year,” Mr Lawless said.

"This is the first time that we have seen total listings across the capital cities the same as they were last year.”

Mr Lawless said lower listing levels were good news for vendors because it meant there was not as much choice in the market which could improve prices.

"In November last year, the listings were 30 per cent higher than they are now,” Mr Lawless said.
"They are currently only 0.5 per cent higher than last year, which means that we have a good benchmark level."

From a supply perspective, it’s a sign that there aren’t as many homes on the market at the moment and that means homes are selling a bit faster and vendors discounting a little less but transaction numbers stabilising.”

Mr Lawless said transaction volumes were at their lowest since 1998 - and were currently lower than during the Global Financial Crisis.

"At the moment based on June data, transaction volumes are 7 per cent lower than the same time last year,” Mr Lawless said.

"We’re averaging 30,000 sales each month and that’s fairly steady across 2012.”

But the lack of stock was being treated calmly by potential buyers who are showing patience about finding exactly the right home.

"A lot more people are attending local houses and showing interest in the market place but there is still not a level of urgency that will push buyers into making a purchase decision rapidly,” Mr Lawless said.

“Purchase decisions won’t be rushed, buyers are playing vendors off against each other and are negotiating pretty hard.”

Figures from the data showed:

- Hobart prices grew 3.9 per cent for the year to date
- Sydney prices grew 1.9 per cent for the year to date
- Darwin prices grew 8.4 per cent for the year to date
- Brisbane prices grew 0.6 per cent for the quarter
- Perth prices lifted just 0.2 per cent for the quarter

Sunday, September 2, 2012

House Prices Flat in August



AUSTRALIAN house prices were flat in August, although Adelaide and Canberra experienced some growth.

House prices in Perth and Hobart fell more than one per cent in the month and there was little price movement in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, the RP Data-Rismark August Index showed.
Adelaide and Canberra prices increased more than one per cent, while Darwin home values fell half a per cent.

The index posted a 1.6 per cent increase in Australian home values over the past three months but a fall of 2.4 per cent over the year to August.
During the quarter to August, Darwin was the best performing capital city, registering 5.2 per cent growth.

This was followed by Melbourne at 2.5 per cent, and Sydney at 2.4 per cent.
Perth and Brisbane recorded marginal growth of 0.2 per cent and 0.6 per cent respectively over the three-month period.

RP Data research director Tim Lawless said Sydney dwelling values increased in five of the past eight months, helping to provide a cumulative capital gain of 1.9 per cent over the year to date.
"Sydney is proving to be one of the most consistent performing capitals this year," he said.

A rebound in Melbourne was also encouraging, given more worrying signals earlier in the year.
"Improved affordability since June has helped dwelling values rise across every capital city over the three months ending August 2012, apart from Adelaide," Mr Lawless said.

"The big question is, can this growth be sustained?"

Mr Lawless said the spring selling season would be a good litmus test.

The highest rental yields for houses in the quarter were in Darwin at 5.8 per cent and the lowest yield were in Melbourne at 3.6 per cent.

Legacy of the Sydney Metro Line Land Grab


THE defunct Sydney Metro is still sitting on a $100 million property empire, with at least two office towers about to be demolished more than two years after the former Labor government pulled the pin on the project.
 
In late 2009 the department behind the short-lived Rozelle-to-city Metro line snapped up $124 million worth of property along the proposed route, including several CBD office blocks, and spent hundreds of thousands of dollars more to turf tenants out of some of the buildings.

In February the following year premier Kristina Keneally killed off the project, which by that stage had already cost the taxpayers $356 million.

However, instead of selling off the property portfolio - or at least releasing the properties to earn some much-needed income - the department has held on to the buildings, and two of them are about to be demolished.

Property records reveal Sydney Metro still owns at least seven buildings it bought during the spending spree; some of those are just standing empty.
The biggest single purchase, the $45 million building at 8 Castlereagh St, has since been relet. Two adjacent 11-storey office blocks in Clarence St, above Wynyard Station in the city - which cost taxpayers a whopping $39 million - have sat almost entirely vacant for the past 2 1/2 years.

At 30 Clarence St, just the ground floor retail space remains occupied after the former government spent more than $500,000 in compensation to tenants to end their leases.

Next door at No. 36 the last of the tenants moved out in July after the 10 other floors sat empty for months.

Both buildings are now set to be demolished to make way for the Wynyard Walk, an underground passage linking the station to Barangaroo.

In late 2010 Ms Keneally announced the $300 million Walk as an alternative link to Barangaroo after the Metro axing left the $6 billion redevelopment with limited public transport.

CBRE leasing agent Tim Molchanoff said similar B- and C-grade buildings rented for upwards of $520 a square metre, meaning the government had also missed out on $3.4 million in rent.
A spokesman for Transport for NSW said all the other buildings were leased.

"These seven properties were acquired by Sydney Metro and all are now owned and managed by Transport for NSW,"

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Home Owners Forced to Take Super - Australia Mortgage


HOME owners have raided their superannuation funds of a record $100 million in last-ditch bids to avoid foreclosure, new government figures have shown.

The surge in mortgage-holders seeking emergency access to their savings has alarmed housing and social welfare groups, who warn many families are still struggling to meet loan repayments despite steep cuts in the interest rate

With distressed owners receiving an average of $15,250 each, there are also concerns some super accounts could be drained of more than a third of their value. The number of households in serious financial trouble has worsened despite mortgage lending rates falling about 1 per cent in the past six months and nearly 3 per cent since their peak in mid-2008.

Figures obtained by The Sun-Herald showed 6500 home owners were given emergency access to their super last financial year to prevent an imminent foreclosure.

A Commonwealth Department of Human Services report found $99.38 million was released, up 25 per cent on 2010-11 and well above the disbursements in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
It also marks the third year in a row that the number of people applying for, and being granted access to, their nest-egg has increased.

A campaign manager for Australians for Affordable Housing, Sarah Toohey, said years of house price growth had seen debt balloon and forced households to devote an unsustainable amount of income to meeting mortgage repayments.

''It's alarming and it shows that housing affordability is about more than just interest rates,'' she said.
''The sheer size of what people have to borrow to get into the housing market now really puts household finances under strain.'

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Sydney's Housing Market to Continue to Grow

Sydney is Australia's most populous city and its housing sector offers investors unique opportunities with the security that comes with investing in a large and rapidly expanding market.

Property prices in Sydney have increased 25 per cent in the last four years, during which many other housing markets around the world have stagnated or even gone backwards.

The reason that Sydney's housing prices have continued to rise is simple - more people want to live there. Famous for its landmark Harbour Bridge and Opera House, Sydney is the business and financial capital of Australia, with an ideal climate and a relaxed yet cosmopolitan lifestyle.

Sydney has nearly five million residents and its annual population growth rate of 1.6 per cent is higher than the Australian average. It is also higher than that of any major western city outside Australia, yet less than half of this increase comes from births.

Most new Sydneysiders are overseas arrivals who come to Australia to start a new or better life, seeking employment or education opportunities for themselves or their children. They have created a steady demand for around 30,000 more dwellings each year, pushing up prices and making Sydney the most expensive city in Australia to buy a house.

The median price of a Sydney house is now around A$620,000 (S$786,740) and it is rising. Landed properties can be purchased on the outskirts of Sydney for around half this amount, but they are located far from the city centre. Sydney's idyllic harbour side location brings problems, as much of the land is locked away in parks or reserves and there is less available for housing. The urban footprint has spread as far south, north and west as there is land available.

It is almost impossible for overseas arrivals to buy a home until they settle and establish themselves, which can take many years. This has led to a rise in Sydney's rents, which are higher than any other major city in Australia.

High rents and prices have changed Sydney's landscape. They have led to the abandonment of the dream of a landed home for many young Sydneysiders and led to a boom in apartment living. Over half of Sydney's dwellings are apartments or "home units" as the locals call them.

The new medium and high-rise apartment blocks contain gymnasiums, swimming pools and garden barbecue areas. The units are fitted out to attract renters, while their design lowers maintenance costs for investors. Many of the suburbs where this transformation is occurring - such as Pyrmont, Ultimo, Camperdown, Double Bay and Broadway - are located close to the central business district and in the urban centre itself.

What makes these dwellings ideal for investors is that prices for home units are still less than 70 per cent of those of similar sized houses.

The Sydney inner urban market is unique because there are fewer development projects in the pipeline than there are in other cities such as Melbourne even as the rental demand is far higher. Rents in these areas are escalating as a result and housing investors from Singapore can buy off-the-plan units with confidence, knowing that both the rental yield and the value of their investment are likely to rise in the coming years.