Posts Tagged ‘property’

Sydney Property Market to Correct?

Despite much speculation that the Sydney property market is overpriced and ready for a fall, upward momentum continued into Q1 2010, although at a slower pace than expected. House prices rose by 1.4% in Q1 2010 while unit prices rose by 1.6%. However, over the twelve month period median prices have risen by 14% and 12% respectively. Remarkably and against the odds, this has taken prices above the peak reached in 2004.

ABS data suggests that house price growth has continued into Q2 at around 5%, with annual growth of just over 20% in Sydney. However, other providers of price data consider it has slowed further.

In real or inflation adjusted terms Sydney continues to sit below 2004 levels, suggesting no real growth for six years. This is similar to trends in the early 1990s where real prices didn’t reach previous peaks until seven to ten years later.

It’s the shortage factor.

A shortage of housing is set to drive rent upwards in the medium terms. Prices may follow, particularly in apartments in the middle and outer ring suburbs. For example apartment rents rose 2.2 percent in the September quarter, the highest rise in the nation. This coupled with flat property prices, rental yields are raising. Apartments, on average bring in 5.1 percent returns; houses 4.5 percent. Rents rising as expected, vacancy low but affordability an issue.

Vacancy rates tightened to 1.1%, down from 1.3% of the previous year. Rental growth of $10 per week in Q1 2011 was the first increase in rents for five quarters and amounted to an increase of 2.5%. With continued undersupply and a healthy level of population growth, rental growth should continue through 2011, particularly in the absence of any short term incentives to move into home ownership.

Dwelling approvals rise continues, but still around 10,000 short per annum. The dearth of new development has been well publicised Once again units were the driving factor, and continues the trend of the past ten years.

Over 80,000 people are likely to have moved to Sydney, generating a need of over 29,000 dwellings, before demolition and household change are taken into consideration. With no further rate hikes expected in 2011 pressure may continue on prices until rates fall in the first quarter of 2012 (if rate cuts do eventuate).

Affordability to decrease as rates and prices rise, and should limit price growth.

Not surprisingly affordability has been weakening as interest rates and prices (and thus loan size) increase. As at March 2011 some 34.5% of average household income was being used to service an average mortgage in NSW of just over $305,000. This is somewhere between the average 5 and 10 year proportions.

Population growth remains strong but as migrants slow, fewer leave interstate. Slowing international immigration appears to finally be eventuating, slowing to 39,000 people from almost 45,000 people in the previous two half years. However, as the gap between NSW median house prices and other States narrows, fewer people are leaving.

While the slowdown in international migrants is expected to continue as tighter immigration rules apply, the improving economy will continue to ensure that a high level of immigration is required. If the net loss interstate can remain low NSW population can continue to grow in excess of 100,000 per year.

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Where to for Sydney property?

Property market observers often refer to the Sydney housing market as amongst the most expensive housing market in Australia and one of the most expensive housing markets in the English-speaking world.

By way of example, the latest Demographic International Housing Affordability Survey showed Sydney’s housing market to be the second most expensive (behind Hong Kong) out of the 325 markets examined.

This is supported too by the September release of MacroBusiness Australian Housing Valuation Report which as shown in their chart below and based on a ration of Multiples (median dwelling prices divided by median household disposable income),  shows Sydney identified as the most expensive housing market based on this measure.

Median Multiples - August 2011

As any home buyer in Sydney will attest to, it is undeniable that the housing market is ‘‘expensive’’, but there is there is also compelling evidence that Sydney’s house prices are based on stronger foundations than the other Australian capitals and that Sydney offers better value from an investment perspective.

Economics 101

Even if you have not studied Economics 101 you will appreciate that supply and demand is the primary and fundamental driver of prices for any commodity. Housing is no different. Indeed housing is THE exemplar for supply and demand at work.

One of the key drivers of Sydney prices over the past few decades has been the consistent supply and demand imbalances. When compared to other states the Sydney supply demand equation has almost always been in favour of upward bias in price pressure (allowing for pauses such as we are now seeing).

Indeed there is a fallacy about supply and demand and many people believe we have a national housing shortage and it is an accepted view that there is a significant shortage of stock. The fallacy has been generated by the tendency to add past shortages to the current year’s figures and the constant press about reducing development activity.

Here it is immigration and state migration that is a prime factor and data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics reveals that Sydney is under-supplied and Melbourne over supplied (when planned buildings are taken into account). In fact, New South Wale’s (read Sydney’s) annual dwelling completions recently plumbed 30-year lows while the other states (particularly Victoria) experienced a mini construction boom.

Although Sydney’s dwelling construction rate – defined as the number of dwelling completions per 1,000 head of population – has for 30 years lagged the national average, it has slumped over the past decade. Sydney is now constructing homes at around half the rate of the other states.

The resources boom is also having an impact on state by stage markets and here it is noted that BHP Billiton recently predicted that over the next five years the mining industry would generate around 170,000 new jobs. Again, taking a leaf out of Economics 101, each new job created has a multiplier effect; it becomes clear why we should optimistically embrace our future.

Dwelling Completions

Sydney was unaffordable for most of the last decade and this market, on average, achieved a growth rate of 5.7 per cent p.a. Its last decade growth rate is an indicator of things to come in other similarly now unaffordable capital city markets. This outcome is not to say that Sydney’s house prices cannot/will not fall; rather that it is less susceptible to a downturn than some of the other capitals, such as Melbourne. Sydney’s price premium has eroded as the chart below shows.

Sydney’s real (inflation-adjusted) house price performance relative to the national capital city average since 2007.

Real House PricesAssuming Sydney’s housing values in relation to the other capital cities are likely to revert to some mean level, the current low valuation gap suggests that Sydney’s housing market is likely to outperform the capital city average.

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NSW Property Buyers get hit for extra Transfer Tax

The NSW State Government has announced that a new transfer fee will be introduced on the transfer of properties valued over $500,000. In his media release the Minister for Lands, Tony Kelly, advised that the fee will be introduced to “strengthen the equity of NSW property transactions and improve the security of the Torrens Title system”, although it is unclear as to how the fee will achieve these aims.

The new Trasnfer Fee Tax will be charged from 1 July 2010 as follows:

$0 to $500,000 – $190

$500,000 to $1 million – $190 +0.2% of the value of the property over $500,000

over $1 million – $1,190 plus 0.25% of the value of the property over $1 million

$1,190 plus 0.25% of the value of the property over $1 million

The new transfer fee is said to commence as of 1 July 2010. It is also unclear as to whether any time limit will be imposed on payment, as it is with stamp duty, and also as to which government agency will be responsible for collecting the fee. The Land and Property Management Authority (LPMA) is responsible for the title registration system in NSW and currently charges a fixed fee of $190 on all transfers, irrespective of value. However, the Office of State Revenue (OSR) is responsible in NSW for the collection of stamp duty on the transfer of dutiable property and has policies to deal with matters such as late payment and determining the value of property for stamping purposes.

The effect of the new transfer fee on the purchase of the average residential property is arguably not great. On a purchase price of $750,000, the new transfer fee payable will be $500 and on a purchase price of $1.5 million, the fee is $2,250.

However, on higher valued properties the new transfer fee may be significant. An additional $23,500 will be payable on a price of $10 million. On a price of $200 million, a transfer fee of almost $500,000 will be payable, an increase of over 4.5% on the current stamp duty collected on a transaction of this size.

(Source: Holding Redlich Lawyers)

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