Australian residential land developer Australand Property Group Ltd says a mortgage interest rate rise in August would have little impact on its business, as the company had avoided projects likely to be affected by such a change.
Australand reported a 34 per cent lift in first half profit, saying it is on track to record an improvement in annual earnings.
The diversified property group made a net profit of $119.596 million for the first six months of calendar 2007, up from $89.256 million in the same period last year.
The result was mainly driven by strong performances in its commercial, industrial property and investment property divisions.
However, the residential development business did record a small increase in pre-tax earnings, as it weathered mixed fortunes in housing markets across Australia.
The residential division's pre-tax profit rose five per cent to $34.3 million.
Asked if a rate rise later this year would affect the company, acting chief executive John Thomas said Australand had shielded itself against such an increase, in particular, by distancing itself from the first-home buyer market.
A rise of 25 basis points to 6.50 per cent has been predicted by many economists after last week's surprisingly strong inflation figures.
"From Australand's perspective, the markets that we are focussed on are unlikely to be affected significantly by interest rates," Mr Thomas said.
"The first home owners market is not where our focus has been. Our focus in on ... quality projects with existing underlying demand, fundamentally from the people who still have plenty of money.
"People in Sydney, for instance, in the eastern suburbs, on the North Shore, likely to be less affected by an interest rate rise.
"Interest rates will really have an effect in the longer term on affordability, particularly in the first home owner market, and those markets that are not performing strongly are the ones we've been pretty careful to keep ourselves out of."
Housing affordability, however, remained a concern for the company, said executive general manager residential, Peter Bourke.
"We still have affordability concerns in Perth and in Sydney, where it takes about 39 per cent of a weekly earnings to service a mortgage," he said.
"That is far too high, especially when you're talking Melbourne at about 28 per cent."
Mr Bourke attributed the affordability problems and spiralling rents in part to a lack of apartment construction, particularly in NSW.
"We have got a lack of apartment construction and some land constraints, and that is adding pressure on the demand supply relationship," he said.
"Apartment construction in the eastern states has basically stalled."
At 1218 AEST, Australand securities had fallen three cents to $2.27.
Source: AAP