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- 2 June 2011
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I agree that residential property is overvalued on most measures, but how and when it will correct is anyone's guess. Like most things, it's taking longer than logic would suggest, such that any fall in "real" value is being eaten by inflation anyway thus avoiding a significant drop in nominal values.
Agreed that it will likely take a long time.I always thought the property market would slowly deflate over say 15-20 years, unless there was a major shock to the economy.
Agreed that it will likely take a long time.
But for an owner occupier, as distinct from a landlord, that's double the time you're likely to own the one property and roughly a third of the time you're likely to own any real estate (unless you live substantially longer than average or buy a house the day you turn 18).
So for an owner occupier, I see it as a case of getting on with life and not worrying about the value of houses too much. Even if it does drop 50% that's only a real issue if you are selling and not buying another property, which generally wouldn't be a relevant decision in this timeframe for those not currently owning their own home (assuming they would mostly be under 40 and thus not likely to be a "last home seller" anytime soon).
A lot of that comes down to personal preference. Personally, I'd rather take the risk of losing some paper wealth, but not physical wealth (the house won't suddenly halve in size even though its' price might) than put up with renting for the next decade or two. Sure, there are good rentals and good landlords but there's an awful lot of hassles with renting at times too.
Despite mortgage rates falling to near record lows, the proportion of aggregate household income chewed-up by mortgage interest is still well above that of the late-1980s/early-1990s, when mortgage rates peaked at 17%. This is because of the inflated housing values and the corresponding high debt loads carried by Australian households.
=sydboy007;795376
Despite mortgage rates falling to near record lows, the proportion of aggregate household income chewed-up by mortgage interest is still well above that of the late-1980s/early-1990s, when mortgage rates peaked at 17%. This is because of the inflated housing values and the corresponding high debt loads carried by Australian households.
I agree, and mentioned earlier, that price inflation has outstripped income and savings. I also believe our RBA should have lowered rates sooner, partly from the affordability perspective, but to allow generation of more savings. The RBA worries about stimulating demand too much by lowering too much, but in hindsight they should have realised by now the dynamics of the housing market was changing radically and in all the circumstances we saw in hindsight how incentives like the Qld $10,000 building boost scheme failed to stimulate first home ownership or new home building quite miserably while our savings rate increased slightly, but as you say it's still under pressure.
I agree with McLovin, but that is not to say that property will continue to go up.
Reasons that property will continue to climb for the next decade :
- Foreign buyers have far greater purchasing power than Australians
- China will keep buying our dirt
Chinese migrants are helping friends and family in China to skirt Australia's foreign investment rules by purchasing established homes on their behalf, agents have told News Corp newspapers.
And Chinese developers are swooping on run-down commercial properties in Sydney and Melbourne to "land bank'' and redevelop as apartments during the next boom.
Foreign buyers snapped up one in every eight new properties built this year - up from one in 20 properties in 2011, National Australia Bank research reveals.
So great is the international demand - fuelled by a falling Aussie dollar and Beijing's ban on buying more than one property - that some developers are now marketing new units exclusively to offshore buyers.
"We're hearing that a lot of developers now aren't even marketing in Australia,'' NAB senior economist Robert De Iure said yesterday.
"They're marketing them in Hong Kong, Singapore and China and we're not even getting a look-in.''
Andrew Taylor, the Australian founder of Chinese property website Juwai, said Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane were the most popular cities for Chinese househunting - but "Perth is really climbing fast''.
He said established homes were more popular than apartments bought off-the-plan.
But Mr Taylor said Chinese migrants were buying properties on behalf of family and friends living in China.
"Many international buyers will use their family and extended networks to purchase property in Australia,'' he said from Shanghai.
"If they have a relative who is a permanent resident, there is no restriction in purchasing a property.''
The following article lists what I see going on in and around where I live and is the reason, I believe, why there is a current surge in sales and increased prices in both Sydney and Melbourne.
I know one Chinese woman in my area (friend of a friend) with PR status who has purchased over 20 properties for overseas family and friends (all cash purchases - no Bank loans).
http://www.news.com.au/realestate/c...before-next-boom/story-fncq3era-1226704103879
Question is, where are the Chinese getting all their money from?
The following article lists what I see going on in and around where I live and is the reason, I believe, why there is a current surge in sales and increased prices in both Sydney and Melbourne.
I know one Chinese woman in my area (friend of a friend) with PR status who has purchased over 20 properties for overseas family and friends (all cash purchases - no Bank loans).
http://www.news.com.au/realestate/c...before-next-boom/story-fncq3era-1226704103879
Slave labour, sweat shops you name it. The sad reality is from a country with such a big population and huge gap between the rich and the dirty poor. The 1% that take advantage of a whole population of people who are born into poverty and debt is still a huge number. The sad thing is if they buy everything out here guess who will be the new generation of workers for them and their kids .... you guessed it our kids
I suppose the only good things from this is that at least some of the pain will be siphoned out of Australia should the crash come.
Will be interesting to see what these foreign buyers do if the AUD does a free fall to 60c or even 50c like it has done before. That's pretty heft currency losses for them, on top of any price falls due to increases in unemployment.
I know of several successful business men in Malaysia who have been buying properties in Australia over the years. They park their money in property in Aus when the exchange rate is low, when it goes up, they sell the properties and move the money back to Malaysia. They are less concerned with the increase in property and more concerned following the exchange rates.
No offense but that sounds like a extremely poor way to invest in currencies. The holding costs and entry and exit costs for property is huge. If they are looking to play the currency markets there are other way way way more efficient means of doing so
What's the problem with that?.... Sigh .....
Came over here to find out what people thought is the direction of the stock market and the longest post is on property
.... Sigh .....
Came over here to find out what people thought is the direction of the stock market and the longest post is on property .
Well Australian property prices are going up . Lead by Sydney and Perth ( ? Peaked in Perth ) .
Sydney is hot and the herd's hoof beats are beating in various other markets . We've just bought property in Brisbane
I'd bet my house on it ..... Actually three houses , two town houses and numerous unitsGeared up and not looking for any more buys at the moment .
So what is happening in the stock market ...
Cliff
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