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Australian home values stablise in July after June losses
After a large 1.0% seasonally-adjusted fall in June, Australian home values changed little in the month of July, recording an increase of +0.1% (up +0.4% seasonally-adjusted).
According to the market-leading RP Data–Rismark Hedonic Home Value Index, Australia’s capital city home values remained relatively flat in the month of July recording a modest, seasonally-adjusted increase of 0.4% (on a raw basis home values were up only +0.1% in the month).
The July results follow a 1.0% seasonally-adjusted decline in the month of June; the first negative movement in Australian capital city home values in 17 months.
Don't you just LOVE RP DATA ???
Will do some research for you robots and post tomorrow on the boost question.
Hello,
how's it going? beautiful day
does anyone know if you get any boost for buying off the plan?
thankyou
professor robots
Do we actually have a lead on the hedonics that they use? That can be used to substantially mask the real trend. The US CPI number has been slashed by dodgy ideas employed in the hedonic modeling... its not real but its politically expedient so reality gets trashed. Not saying they are doing it BUT it pays to understand what the hedonic adjustments are.
Side note.... attached is a table tallying the explosion in OTC interest rate derivatives used in Oz. I think that we have an unhealthy dependency in that area, trouble in that market spells big trouble for Oz RE IMO FWIW... one to keep an eye on... yeah I know obsessive compulsive broken record yada yada yada! Anyway a fast move in rates could lever this market out of the water.... to keep in mind, that tis all.
Hi,
Just curious, does anyone have any stats on the growth in mortgage debt against the growth in prices for the last two years?
Just interested if the current prices rises have been a direct result of increasing debt levels and if so, if this debt growth cannot be sustained would it result in prices coming back down to earth and a few people getting burnt fingers.
It seems our friends and allies in the US had unprecedented debt growth which resulted in super charged price increases, as that growth in debt has receded so have prices.
Cheers
Hi Beej,
Depends how you read the numbers, even a flatlining at 150% is alarming.
Are the figures averaged out over the whole population ?
I doubt the majority of the population is running at 150% debt to disposable income so there must a section of the community with a disproportional high ratio.
Curious to know who's included in the mix.
Again - this strongly indicates that the recent price rises in Oz are NOT being driven primarily by credit growth (ie house prices have actually increased more than outstanding credit for the past few years).
May also indicate house prices have been driven by international buyers, ie our housing market is diverging from locally driven factors.Shows that for the past 2 years housing credit growth has been much lower than for the preceding 20 years, yet despite this house prices have seen steady gains since the end 2008/early 2009 slump. Again - this strongly indicates that the recent price rises in Oz are NOT being driven primarily by credit growth (ie house prices have actually increased more than outstanding credit for the past few years).
Australian home values stablise in July after June losses
After a large 1.0% seasonally-adjusted fall in June, Australian home values changed little in the month of July, recording an increase of +0.1% (up +0.4% seasonally-adjusted).
According to the market-leading RP Data–Rismark Hedonic Home Value Index, Australia’s capital city home values remained relatively flat in the month of July recording a modest, seasonally-adjusted increase of 0.4% (on a raw basis home values were up only +0.1% in the month).
The July results follow a 1.0% seasonally-adjusted decline in the month of June; the first negative movement in Australian capital city home values in 17 months.
Don't you just LOVE RP DATA ??
Australian home values stablise in July after June losses
After a large 1.0% seasonally-adjusted fall in June, Australian home values changed little in the month of July, recording an increase of +0.1% (up +0.4% seasonally-adjusted).
According to the market-leading RP Data–Rismark Hedonic Home Value Index, Australia’s capital city home values remained relatively flat in the month of July recording a modest, seasonally-adjusted increase of 0.4% (on a raw basis home values were up only +0.1% in the month).
The July results follow a 1.0% seasonally-adjusted decline in the month of June; the first negative movement in Australian capital city home values in 17 months.
Don't you just LOVE RP DATA ???
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