Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Property sales : Has the dead cat bounced in Australia's property mearket?

Property sales : Has the dead cat bounced in Australia's property market?

Property sales across the country have slumped to their lowest level in 10 years. despite rising sales in Melbourne, and some upturn in Sydney's housing market
Figures from RP Data show sales of houses and units dipped 20 per cent in 2010 on the back of a number of interest rate rises, and falling demand for other reasons too I suspect.
Darwin Brisbane and Hobart all recorded lower home sales activity, with Sydney leading the way.
The "dead cat bounce" analogy
Home sales fell last year to below those recorded at the height of the global financial crisis in 2008. That was when the rest of the World had a major correction in house prices and Australia missed that bath. Hence the dead cat bounce comparison.
Whilst we have seen several raises in mortgage interest rates, they are hardly a concern at average mortgage rates we have and full employment, so my guess is that house prices have got ahead of themselves and until they soften further we are unlikely to see an upswing in home buyers any time soon.
New Responsible lending laws
One thing that people are not talking about is that from January 1st, 2011, banks had to be more diligent in the lending due to new responsible lending laws taking affect.
The fact is that new land on the Sunshine coast is so over priced that lenders may be reluctant to fund the silly prices being asked for blocks of land, on the basis that the market may well soften further and they would be caught holding the baby.
This is besides the fact that the borrowers may have a hard time meeting the repayments. It may becoming easier for bank managers to say no to loans, as the big banks are loaded with mortgage borrowers who have equity in their homes and the ability to repay the loan. Why pick up new business that does not meet that criteria?
You may have noticed that the ads from the big home builders and the developers have suddenly stopped. They are not into throwing good money after bad, and the developers may have to start thinking about discounting their land if they want to offload the land that they have going unsold.
First Home Buyers an extinct species
Over priced land has killed off the first home buyers in the new home sector. Decades ago cheap land was the spur that meant that first home buyers usually bought house and land in the sticks. Well that does not happen anymore.
And the problem is that second home buyers wanting to move up want a decent lot size. That won't happen under $300,000 on the Sunshine Coast. So since when was residential land worth over $2 million dollars an acre? Since Stockland and Delfin monopolised the residential land development market it seems to me.
All was fine whilst the Labor Government propped up sales with trebling the first home owners grant to stimulate first home buyers into building a new home. Well that has stopped and as usual, the price of everything rose to the level that people could afford with the grants. Take them away and the party is over. Isn't this what has in fact happened?

If the Government wants to get people into new homes, and get home prices down, it needs to take control of land sales and development.
Without new players in the home loan markets, expect to see mortgage business drop and the return of refinancing and debt consolidation in the mortgage broker sector.