Home Travel n Tour Australian Property Prices Grow at the Fastest Rate Since 2004

Australian Property Prices Grow at the Fastest Rate Since 2004

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Australian house prices grew by 13.5% over the past 12 months, making it the most significant annual gain since 2004. Once again, houses have strongly outperformed units, with Sydney, Hobart, Darwin, and Canberra the standout performers over the last financial year, seeing gains of nearly 20% across the board, according to the latest data from CoreLogic.

In June, dwelling values increased in all the major capital cities and regional Australia. Each capital city saw an uplift in dwelling values, ranging from a 3.0% rise in Hobart to a more subdued 0.2% increase in Perth. However, certain areas are starting to see momentum slowing down.

It continues to be the top-end of the housing market, particularly in places like Sydney and Melbourne, leading to the uptrend in price appreciation. Notably, the bottom end of the market, generally built around the first home buyer market, has started to ease off.

Much of the gains from this end of the market came from the numerous Government incentives, which effectively bought demand forward. The record low cost of finance continues to be the main driver of the upper end of the market, along with the fact that supply levels are still very tight.

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Head of Research at CoreLogic, Elize Owen, notes that supply levels are still well below historical levels. “The latest listings count from CoreLogic indicates that in the 28 days to June 27th, the total advertised stock remained 24.4% below the five-year average. This dynamic of strong consumer demand, and low housing supply, continues to create some urgency among buyers.”

Perth and Darwin Lagging

The loss of momentum is seen most clearly in the two mining states of WA and the Northern Territory. For Perth dwellings, the monthly growth rate in values had averaged 1.4% between January and May 2021 but fell to 0.2% through June. Across Darwin, the monthly growth rate in dwelling values averaged 2.1% between January and May but was just 0.8% through June.

“The key to understanding the softer performance in these resource-based markets may be a slightly different supply-demand dynamic compared to the other capital cities and regions,” says Ms. Owen.

“CoreLogic monitors a ‘sales to new listings ratio, which divides the monthly volume of settled sales by new listings brought to market. The sales to new listings ratio has averaged 1.1 across Darwin and Perth for the past three months. While the implication is that there are 1.1 sales for each new listing, which could be enough to elicit further growth in dwelling values, these are the lowest sales to new listings results of the capital city markets.”

Momentum is Slowing

Despite the intense 12 months of house price growth, the data would indicate that price growth is starting to ease off. From an affordability perspective, persistent housing value growth rates are proving unsustainable, and renewed headwinds amid a lockdown in Sydney and other parts of the country. CoreLogic notes, ‘… the housing market has clearly lost some growth momentum.

It’s also clear that while lockdown measures impact transaction volumes, they are not harming prices at this point, according to CoreLogic. In the future, the main issues are affordability and the outlook for interest rates. CoreLogic says, ‘affordability constraints and the potential for tighter lending conditions and rising mortgage rates remain the primary headwinds for property market performance’.

‘Already through June, several of the major banks have forecast cash rate increases earlier than has previously been indicated by the RBA. A sooner-than-expected uplift in the cash rate would bring forward mortgage rate rises and reduce demand for credit. Furthermore, off the back of APRA writing to major lenders to ensure proactive risk management in home lending, there have been early signs of more conservative home loan assessments’. ‘Any reduction in credit availability is likely to contribute to a downside shift in market conditions.‘

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