OK some questions for those older and wiser, since I have know about this bubble for a short while, and it concerns me and makes me edgy about owning shares given what happened in the US. [And lets not even get started on the Chinese real-estate bubble - I have seen videos of those empty cities and the people holding the over-priced estate as 'an investment' and that is FCked up, but anyway]
Would be good to know this, since I know very little about the australian real estate market.
Does australia have the kind of securitization of mortgage debt that the US had during the bubble? That is, the packaged tranche-divided debt instruments etc.- To what extent has australian home equity been borrowed against compared to how it was in the US?
- Are there any instances of negative-amortization lending?
- Does australia have a similar level of government subsidization of home-ownership, as occurred in the US with fannie mae and freddie mac?
- Is there a situation of increasing credit expansion in spite of increasing interest rates, as occurred in the US?
Cheers!
****ty numbers out for Australia today.
NAB business confidence down from 8 to 6.
QoQ housing starts down from +2.1% to -13.2% (expected -5%).
Hefty drop.
With China's inflation breaking above 5% over the weekend, it is expected they will use fx adjustment to bring corrections, and this will undoubtedly spill over into other Asian investment currencies. I suggest the first 2 quarters of 2011 may be a good time to remain on the sidelines for buyers.
Cheers
(I have no vested interest in the above commentary which simply represents my informed personal opinion).
The word 'robust' seems to be getting overused nowadays. 'Exerting robust pressure' just sounds hilarious. The US is also nagging for China to allow the yuan to appreciate, but it doesn't move. I don't see what the US has to pressure china with, so its more or less just noise. Also, I can imagine some pretty epic downturns in Australia if the chinese simply let their housing bubble go unchecked, so perhaps it is best they tighten now.Hello Trembling Hand,
Yes, that's exactly my point. China can hardly reduce rates to contain inflation - it will constrict lending and raise rates. In contrast the US is exerting robust presure for China to lower rates, and the end result will undoubtedly be (significantly) increased fx volatility with negative repercussions for Asia currencies. I expect the raised rates in China will impact quite directly on Chinese property investments in Oz .... I just didn't want to write a 300 word explanation ... I simply wanted to add some informed commentary to the debate that seemed needed, from someone with broad market experience etc ...
Cheers
Errrr huh?
Ya may want to double check your "informed personal opinion". The pressure is on China to move UP their currency. Have a look at the Taiwan Dollar as a china proxy,
It's my view that we will see a sharp and significant property market correction in the third quarter of 2011. Around that time I expect to see the broad Asian currencies come under sustained pressure, which in turn may begin a significant capital flight by Asian property investors as they liquidate "low-end" investment properties in Australian capital cities.
Also, I can imagine some pretty epic downturns in Australia if the chinese simply let their housing bubble go unchecked, so perhaps it is best they tighten now.
Well if that is the goal of the chinese then good luck to them. If anyone knows anything about bernanke and his background, you also know that he is quite happy to run the printing presses until they blow up. He sees the current crisis as a copy of what happened following 1929, and he thinks that if he does the opposite of what the central bank did then, then everything will turn out fine.But they don't want to. Need to keep it pegged to the US$ to support the value of what is owed to them.
Still no reports in the press or on here re weekend property results.
must be bad out there.
Interesting
Why would the Asian currencies come under sustained pressure?Originally Posted by Platofx
It's my view that we will see a sharp and significant property market correction in the third quarter of 2011. Around that time I expect to see the broad Asian currencies come under sustained pressure, which in turn may begin a significant capital flight by Asian property investors as they liquidate "low-end" investment properties in Australian capital cities.
Australand MD rob pradolin says 30% - 40% of unit developments wont go ahead by the devolpas maate
so all those with cash deposits have to sit out up to 5 years as the sunset clause keeps their cash locked in their greedy hands..
Australand MD rob pradolin says 30% - 40% of unit developments wont go ahead by the devolpas maate
so all those with cash deposits have to sit out up to 5 years as the sunset clause keeps their cash locked in their greedy hands..
its looking real good now for some sort of a shake up
but as we all know, the usual suspects here will be rallying hard for this bubble to continue and maintain its all good..
imho when the property market corrects, it will impact on the latte drinkin developas and of course will send plenty of cafes broke as their client base can no longer afford to sip lattes all day and be a "developa maate" anymore..
victoria is going great with the falsified weekly auction figures grossly overestimating clearance rates with mysteriously disappearing results never being corrected until friday, long forgotten as everyone believes the false 61% clearance rates touted by the industry desperate to keep this bubble alive
who on earth is going to buy the 50% of the homes not sold at auction these past months?
its curious that the experts in the industry are seeing a different horizon to the rose coloured glass wearing developas, and the supporters of the bubble here on this forum.... in melbourne there are only 33,451 apartment up for sale right now to be built.. thats hardly a problem for the latte sippers i think.. lets see how quickly they clear that stock out..
all good... we will wait and see if 2011 will be a 20% increase in RE value for the developas or will the whole charade fall into a giant hole and a new reality come through for the bubble supporters..
i am tipping a rude awakening beckons..
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