It seems to me that you are trying to convince yourself that property is ok, and maybe it is. However there are enourmous amounts of real financial data that indicates all is not well. Be objective and consider that property may be in for a siginificant correction before this crisis is over. I am standing on the sidelines to see what pans out, there are much firmer investments elsewhere at the moment, when I am sure that we are rising off the bottom will be keen to get back in
I am trying to communicate this information so that anyone bothering to read forums such as this get a broader view than what they would get if all comments were dominated by the bears of the internet on this topic.
and the best information I have gained here..is something outstanding....those stats do not include units or detached houses...how surreal...when that market represents 30% of the total market....
geez...what other industry only uses 70% to play god with the figures
For residential houses a similar stratified model is used, but suburbs are grouped by their long term median “price-of-land.” That is, an estimate of land-value is obtained as sale price divided by land-size. This is then used to form the long-term price-of-land for each suburb, from which strata are created.
The premise for this lies in hedonic theory which suggests that the value of a composite good – such as a house – is the sum of its components. Thus, by decomposing the sample of houses into their various structural and location attributes, the differences in these qualitative factors across houses can be controlled.
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/What-went-wrong-with-the-ABS-pd20090507-RT7RU?OpenDocument&src=is&is=Property&blog=Concrete%20DetailRP Data-Rismark collects around 40 per cent of all sales live directly from agents. Testing proves that this information correlates almost perfectly with the final government data, which makes sense since the agents rely on it themselves.
More than 1.3 million households are suffering mortgage stress despite low interest rates, a new survey has found.
Independent market analyst Datamonitor found that almost a quarter of mortgage holders are experiencing mortgage stress, with first home buyers who bought in the past 12 months especially vulnerable.
Thirty per cent of these new buyers said they were facing mortgage stress, while 21 per cent expect they will have difficultly paying back their home loan over the next five years
"Economic contraction and consumer concerns risk fuelling a vicious cycle."
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) left the cash rate unchanged last week after its monthly board meeting, but had previously reduced the rate by 4.25 per cent since September last year.
Mr Ingemarsson said official interest rate cuts to stimulate spending may have become less effective because the major banks have not passed rate cuts on to borrowers in full.
Borrowers may also be hesitant to spend the money freed up by lower rates.
The most common reaction from pressured home loan borrowers has been to cut back on spending, with 39 per cent saying they had cut back on luxury items in order to be able to afford their mortgage.
However, concerns over the economy are not just isolated to home loan borrowers with 29 per cent of all consumers saying they will have difficulty paying their bills over the next 12 months.
"There are also some concerns that cautious consumers may hoard government stimuli payments," Mr Ingemarsson said.
"There is the risk that consumer concerns will result in a negative spiral, as lower consumer spending leads to lower business spending and higher unemployment, which in turn leads to an even more cautious consumer mindset."
Eighty-six per cent of consumers deemed it likely that Australian unemployment would rise over the next 12 months.
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