Modest
It's in the chart
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- 7 September 2012
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Pete Wargent @PeteWargent
Darwin dwelling values now where they were 7 years ago; Perth dwelling values retraced to 2007 levels
http://corelogic.com.au/news/capita...n-september-to-be-2-9-higher-over-the-quarter … #ausbiz
I've got a feeling it's about to go bust.
http://www.fool.com.au/2016/10/06/311000-homeowners-have-zero-or-negative-equity-in-their-homes/
I've got a feeling it's about to go bust.
http://www.fool.com.au/2016/10/06/311000-homeowners-have-zero-or-negative-equity-in-their-homes/
I dont think banks will start foreclosing because LVR is at 100%... CEOs of banks have a limited lifespan, and when bad debts get out of hand, they lose their bonuses and eventually their jobs.
That said, I think if they mess with credit availability too much, then we have a different problem on our hands.
Your son must be on a good wicket though?
My 28 year old son with no credit history was offered $1M by a bank no problems....there's the problem.
Incredible variation across the country in the return on prices.
Sydney/Melbourne is a joke whilst outside the eastern sea board the country is on its knees. Very interesting.
There's an opportunity there somewhere.
There is a real lack of supply that is feeding the beast and squeezing buyers in Sydney at the moment. A house close to me was listed at $1.4 and ended up going for $1.7m. No off street parking, two bedrooms, one bathroom. There's so much FOMO at the moment. It's not healthy. Falling rents and rising house prices is not healthy. SMSF's being used by property developers as lenders of last resort is not healthy. The wave will probably break when all these apartments being built come on line in the next few years.
I just don't get it... To rent the place, you're paying about 3% of the asset value at most, and that's gross.
There are downsides to renting of course, and people pay a premium - but there's limits.
The place I'm renting is achieving a gross yield of 2.4% (estimating value on similar sales) - inner east of Melbourne (Surrey Hills). Sure, there's the whole negative gearing thing. But making a loss for tax purposes on the hope that the greater fool theory holds out doesn't really appeal to me.
I always think there's something I'm missing...
Perhaps it needs to be thought of from the perspective of the owner-occupier not the investor? The low returns are a function of the premium people are willing to pay to live in their own home.
That house I mentioned was bought by an owner-occupier.
There are downsides to renting of course, and people pay a premium - but there's limits.
At a sale last week, auctioneer Baldwin took 134 bids for a drab, two-bedder in Greenacre, 18 kilometers west of Sydney, before dropping the hammer at A$926,000. That’s 19 percent more than the median price for that size of property. Baldwin said the main draw wasn’t even the house; it was the chance to knock it down and build anew. Some buyers are saying: ‘we’d better get in or we’ll never get in,’ he said.
Being a 30 year old Sydney Sider I can honestly say I don't think there will be a 'pop'.
Not saying property is a good investment now in Sydney but those expecting the worse need a catalyst to cause it.
Agreed about the rental argument and that's why any spare funds I have will be invested in the share market (6% gross!) vs sydney property (3% gross!)
Being a 30 year old Sydney Sider I can honestly say I don't think there will be a 'pop'.
The catalyst will come in a few ways.
The big one is interest rate rising back to its normal "non-zero" real rate - say, 5%.
Then there's renters losing their job, or Centrelink giving them a hard time, and can't afford to pay rent for a couple weeks.
Combine that with owners usually owning 3 properties and paying only the interest payment. When interest and principal requirement kicks in, and enough renters missing payment here and there... you'll see the rush to get the heck out.
Don't get me wrong, I think the system is broken, but I'm also being realistic. People were on here 4 years ago calling the end. I could name 10 people right now who would pay what most of Australia think is obscene money for a nice Sydney metro area. There is demand there.
Catalysts. Who knows. I can't see rates rising any time soon. Black swan unemployment event maybe. Some of your assumptions are off the mark though, I'm talking solid sydney locations and they will always be wanted.
I'm annoyed at myself I've missed s huge opportunity. I was lucky enough to buy an apartment in a good area a few years back with a conservative mortgage partly due to this thread lol. If I'd pulled the trigger on something and stretched myself I'd be laughing
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