Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

Properties By Postcode 2006

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Hi

I recall the AFR did a property by postcode supplement in late 2005, providing median house/unit prices for postcodes country wide. Did the AFR do this for 2006? If so, does anybody have a copy?

Ta
 
If someone can tell me which issue it was in I should be able to forward an electronic copy to whoever wants it.
 
doctorj said:
If someone can tell me which issue it was in I should be able to forward an electronic copy to whoever wants it.

That would be great if anyone can tell is the issue number. The 2005 version was issued on 28 December 2005 if that is of any use?
 
SevenFX, great website.

Crash, bubble, burst! What a joke.

Apparently for the last 3 years Melbourne Metro had 0% growth, right???

But on a suburb by suburb basis Black Rock went +31%, Mornington went -4%, Beaumaris went +22%, Eltham went +11%, Endeavour Hills went +8%, Wantirna South went -8% and Lilydale/Croydon/Mooroolbark went +25%, 0% and +13%.

I just sold out of Black Rock for a 36% gain in 2 years.

Enjoy.
 
theasxgorilla said:
SevenFX, great website.

Crash, bubble, burst! What a joke.

Apparently for the last 3 years Melbourne Metro had 0% growth, right???

But on a suburb by suburb basis Black Rock went +31%, Mornington went -4%, Beaumaris went +22%, Eltham went +11%, Endeavour Hills went +8%, Wantirna South went -8% and Lilydale/Croydon/Mooroolbark went +25%, 0% and +13%.

I just sold out of Black Rock for a 36% gain in 2 years.

Enjoy.
Median prices or the far more useful SAME HOUSE prices? There's a big differene between the two in a market where the quality of housing has changed considerably over a relatively short period. :2twocents
 
There is no such thing as a SAME HOUSE price, except when you sell the same house two years later like I did. Well, actually, I reno'd it...so that doesn't really count since it's not the same, it's "improved".

Herein lies the beauty of real estate and is why reading about median house price stats (IMO) runs a distant second to actually figuring out how to make money.
 
theasxgorilla said:
There is no such thing as a SAME HOUSE price, except when you sell the same house two years later like I did. Well, actually, I reno'd it...so that doesn't really count since it's not the same, it's "improved".

Herein lies the beauty of real estate and is why reading about median house price stats (IMO) runs a distant second to actually figuring out how to make money.
Same or very similar house. The point being that the median house price doesn't actually track the true change in capital value of a house as an investment when many of those houses have had capital injections (renovations) over that time period.

It's like buying 1000 shares in XYZ for $1000. After 6 months you buy another 100 shares for $100. After another 6 months the 1100 shares are valued at $1100. Now, if the median investor does that then the median value of the investment went up 10% over 12 months. But you didn't make one cent in actual profit.

With the renovation boom in recent times there is presumably a similar effect happening with median house prices - some of the growth is real but some is nothing more than the effect of injecting new capital into the asset.
 
Smurf1976 said:
With the renovation boom in recent times there is presumably a similar effect happening with median house prices - some of the growth is real but some is nothing more than the effect of injecting new capital into the asset.

Totally agree. The other part of that equation is that the median house price stats won't tell you what condition a place is in or what has been done to improve it. It also doesn't tell you about the setting within a particular neighbourhood of a suburb. Since people (in my experience) tend to buy houses using sense and emotion the feed-good-factor is less easily quantified and certainly not perceivable from realestate.com.au or house price stats.
 
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