Is the tide turning on our property markets?

expert-michael-yardney.jpgAustralians love to talk about 4 things... football, the weather, property and interest rates.

And right now what’s going on with the property markets is top of mind for many Australian investors. Over the last few weeks it has become obvious that the tide is slowly turning from a seller's market to a buyer's market and many people are asking; is this the beginning of the end?

Six interest rate rises, lower affordability, fewer finance approvals, concern about overseas economies and more properties for sale than last year have all combined to slow down the boom we have been experiencing.

So…is this the beginning of the end?

No. In my opinion this is the end of the beginning…

And I’m not being smart with words. After a year or so we have now completed the first stage of the property cycle and the markets are behaving normally.

Every property cycle begins with something real, something fundamental and last year it was pent up demand from homebuyers who had put off their buying decision because of the GFC.

The flame was ignited by historically low interest rates and the first home owners’ boost, which turned into a second and third home owners grant as these first home buyers went out and borrowed $40,000 to $50,000 more and handed it over to elated vendors, who then spent this plus more on their next home.

The markets then boomed with what seemed like an insatiable appetite for real estate from homeowners to upgrade their homes and from investors who had now regained their confidence and took advantage of low interest rates.

The latest figures from Residex (below) show how our various property markets performed over the last 12 months, and while overall the markets are still running strong, there are signs that finally demand is starting to be satisfied.

res table june 10.jpg
Source Residex www.residex.com.au

Of course the media is jumping on signs like falling auction clearance rates to write spectacular headlines and the doomsayers are out again saying that the “property bubble will burst.”

What do I say to this?

I guess many in the media have forgotten what a normal market is. Only 18 months ago we were in the depths of a financial crisis that was touted as the worst since the Great depression (remember those headlines?). And more recently auction clearance rates of over 80% and booming property prices have caught the headlines.

Neither of these are normal markets.

To be honest, I’ve enjoyed the last year when the value of many of my properties has gone up by more than 20%, but I knew this couldn’t last.  In fact I didn’t want it to last, otherwise we would be setting ourselves up for an almighty crash.

So what next?

The markets will enter the next stage of the property cycle - after the initial strong rise the market will keep rising but more slowly and more selectively.

The same fundamentals that underpinned our property markets last year are still in play - increasing demand from a rising population and insufficient supply to meet this demand. Add to this a strong economy, rising building costs, low vacancy rates and virtually full employment and we have all of the fundamentals to support a healthy property market.

But despite these strong fundamentals, in the short term at least it looks like it has become more difficult for some buyers, particularly the more price sensitive buyers, to obtain finance or service their loans.

We are already experiencing 2 tier markets. While overall median prices are rising, in each city there are winners and losers. According to Residex research, more than 50% of suburbs lost value in the last quarter, as did more than 20% of the suburbs in Brisbane.

Our rising interest rates and property values will affect different markets differently.

Affordability will become more of a problem in the outer and first home owner suburbs, where wage growth is pinned to something like the CPI.

However in the more affluent suburbs, affordability will not be as much of an issue. People living in these areas will have more disposable income and they are nowhere near as dependent on the increase in the average wage to increase their affordability. Many run businesses, own investment portfolios, and receive bonuses so their disposable income and ability to pay more for the home of their dreams is not as limited.

Hidden amongst all the bad news in the media recently there was some good news in the Reserve Bank Governor’s statement: the RBA believes the Australian economy is set to grow strongly and that the optimistic assumptions underpinning the federal budget are sound.

This should give comfort to those worried by the many predictions of economic disaster. If you pit the headline-seeking doomsday brigade against the RBA, I'll believe the Reserve Bank any day.

Our research suggests that we will see 6 to 10% grow per annum in our capital cities, but the market will now be much more selective.

So what should an investor do?

Take advantage of this lull in the market to buy the type of property you would have had to fight harder for a few months ago. Currently, established one and 2 bedroom apartments make great investments – especially those with a good floor plan, an element of scarcity and the ability to add value.

But you can’t buy any property – buy very selectively in suburbs in the upper price ranges and buy above median price properties.

I know this is different advice to what many other property people are saying, but think about it…  If you do what everyone else does, you’ll get the same results everyone else gets, and we know most property investors never get past their first or second property.

I’ll keep you up to date with how to take advantage of the changes happening in our property markets in future updates, but it is probably appropriate to remind you that in changing times like we are experiencing, no one can help you quite like the independent property investment strategists at Metropole.

Remember we have no properties to sell, but access to every property on the market. If you want to find out a bit more about what is happening in your local market and what our research suggests is in store for us, join us at a free property briefing in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. Just click on this link to find out more and reserve your place.

Also, if you would like to educate yourself please read the FULLY UPDATED NEW 3rd edition of my best selling book How to Grow a Multi-Million Dollar Property Portfolio – in your spare time. Over the last 4 years my book has become the property investment classic and this new edition will give you updated strategies to take advantage of the new property cycle. Please click here for more details or to order your copy today.

button-twitter.jpgIn between these fortnightly property updates, you can follow my NEW BLOG which I will be regulalry updating by clicking here and my property news updates on Twitter. To follow me please click here.

Michael Yardney is a best selling author and one of Australia’s leading experts in the psychology of success and wealth creation through property. He is Australia's most published property author and has probably educated more successful property investors than anyone else in Australia. Go to www.metropole.com.au

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Comments (17)

Phillip Sharp
Said this on 17-06-2010 At 07:36 pm
Prices couldn't keep going up at this rate. In fact they've gone too high as it is. Times are tough out here. Prices will fall - wait and see.
That's when it will be time to buy!
Peter Petrides
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 02:39 am
Right....And i guess youve been waiting since the 90's for this to happen then? Clearly if someone has a fear of investment in property, then one will always believe its a bad time to buy. If you are a buy and hold investor like me, these comments and fears are irrelevant. A true long term investor, would be buying NOW, when most Australians are thinking doom and gloom. Look closely, property might seem to be coming down, when in actual fact, it might not rise as quick.........but it will continue to rise, thats the point. I have been following Michaels advice for years, and have 4 properties, one of which i purchased only this year, and I am happy to share with you in 10 years, what this property will be worth. In the worst case, if properties do go down (which unless we suddenly build homes to match supply wont happen), I will buy even more. The capital Growth monster continues, slowly some years, and quicker in others, but it ALWAYS continues.......Dont wait, it will be the biggest mistake you will make for long term property investment.
Lyn Truong
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 10:42 am
I agree with you Peter Petrides! We are in our mid 30's, with one child, combined income of $130K and own 5 properties in SYD and another 2 overseas. The first one we bought in 1999 is a 2 bedder unit in Liberty Grove, it's double in value now and positive gear.The most expensive one we've recently bought in Jan 10 is where we would like to move in in 2 years'time, it costs us $1.15M (inner west, a 2 story house, 4 bedders, 500sqm land). The vendors bought it in 1977 for $35,500. Of course, they've done a lot of renovation but see......after 33 years....how many times their property has been gone up in value?

Keep buying if you can, rent it out, get negavite gear in your tax....then "unworry" about your retirement and your children's future. Without your help, they would no way be able to afford a house in 20 years'time!

Good on you, all property investors and all the best!
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 12:07 pm
I've never had to have help from my parents or my parent get help from their parents. What we are breeding with this ideology is a culture of dependence. The same culture that makes welfare an entilement when things get tough.
Tell your children to go out and get it themselves otherwise they will lose everything to the children who have been taught to be self sufficient.
I would urge you to sell and stop spoiling your child.
Lyn Truong
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 01:39 pm
Thanks for your advice Peter. Luckily, until now, our girl is not spoilt at all and we are very aware of that. We did get help from our parents when bought the 1st property after graduating from Uni. Thanks for their on-time help, we can be where we are now while many of our friends are still saving for their 1st home deposit. But we don't rely on them at all, we are both working and investing very hard. Our girl has been taught about money even she's now only 3 and a half, she has what she needs, not what she wants.

We only hope with our investments and hard working we could send her to a private school, to pay for her tertiary education and give her a "kick start" after graduating, just like what we received from our parents. And if we lucky enough to have a second child, he/she would receive the same.

The rest of our asset, will go to charity.
Konrad
Said this on 19-06-2010 At 12:11 am
It's all about creating a great team with a common interest. My parents started me out, now im on my 4th investment property going in to my thirtys. What better than to have a team, that you know have your best interests in mind.....Sort your children out and they might not send you to an elderly home.....
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 10:46 am
Totally agree with Peter's comments. Property investing in the long term is very forgiving. Over the last 100 years in Australia, property around Australia grows in value on an average of 10%. NOW is the time for investors to get into the market if they havnt already done so. The media circus make great headlines and these headlines sell papers that harp on about all the doom and gloom. Listen to the experts, not the media. My wife and I started our investment journey in 2006 and if we hadnt taken the plunge, we would still be like a lot of our friends who will end up working until they are 65. We wont be because we decided to do something. I like Peter, have been following Michaels comentary for many years and really enjoy his articles (cant believe its still free) Keep up the great work Michael
Brad
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 11:46 am
Hi Peter,

I am considering using Metropole services, tell me did you buy the property this year yourself or did you have Metropole do it and will you also have them develop this property?

Cheers
Brad
Peter Petrides
Said this on 01-07-2010 At 02:12 am
Hi Brad, No I purchased it myself, as i have made quite good friends with a few local realestate agents, so when a buy of my particlualr interests come about, i am contacted (another one of Michaels tips).

I am confident in doing the process myself, even when developing, but its the advice and learnings from alot of reading, and communicating with people just like yourself, that i can do this:)
Kat B
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 12:00 pm
Considering that the demand for houses is created by credit*, and the banks are tightening their lending criteria, surely that would mean a lower demand as less people are granted mortgages?

Just this morning I read an article that there are more people working in construction that in manufacturing. Australia, unlike China, cannot afford to finance empty cities. What happens when the construction boom slackens? What will all those workers do? How will they afford their mortgages?

European cities have been around for centuries; imagine if property went up 10% pa (above underlying inflation) without change. Their house prices would be literally astronomical (eg. $1.3 x 10^13 -- after CPI and currency exchange) under those conditions. That sort of rise is called exponential and is unsustainable. You can do the maths yourself using the data from the Herengracht Index.

The reality is that there is a long term trend of housing value, that the Australian property has sky-rocketed away from, and looking at the Herengracht Index, it's feasible that we will return to that, as house prices have done so previously. The time-frame of that is unknown.

Steven Keen, Peter Schiff, Jeremy Grantham and other respected economists have warned about our over-heated housing market. Until we know what the further intervention from the Australian government looks like (to prop it all up), it is hard to tell where the market will head.

*It is only the very few that can purchase a house without credit from a bank.
Patrick Jones
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 02:00 pm
Michael, consistently good information. I hope you're right cos it all sounds reasonable. Wondering if you could occasioanlly include reference to other property investment specilaists views on the observations you make about market trends so we could feel confident that others are seeing some of what you see. Thanks again, compulsory reading.
Michael Yardney
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 06:36 pm
Thanks for the kind words Patrick.
I keep close track of what many other property experts say.
Many of what you call "property investment specialists" consistently get it wrong. They don't seem to have the same perspective. Mine comes form 38 years experience and a team of experts on the ground in the markets every day to balance the research data
phil
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 06:11 pm
Thinking about Kat B's comments - essentially there are two fundamentally different ways to look at the property market value, moving forward. One is that the doubling every 8-10 years trend will continue as it has for the last 80 years. The other is that the annual income/house price ration is now at the top end of affordability ( 1: 6-7, as opposed to a more historic 1:3-4) and that therefore as the ratio continues to become more differential we will see a departure from the 8-10 year doubling cycle, ie: slower growth in next 10 years, as less people on normal wage will have servicability, both in reality and according to banks, hence less buyers ( they rent instead), so slower growth. Half of me says the former will cotinue as usual, the other half of me says the second situation will come into play from here on. I wonder - maybe nothing drastic either way, it just doubles in say 12- 14 years from here on??
Said this on 18-06-2010 At 11:15 pm
I would love an internet site that shows you the history of a suburb...and wonder why when you are going through the real estate sites that an icon doesn't pop out at you anymore enticing you to find out more about the history of a particular suburbs or even a small city's cyclical trends.

These articles from M.Y. are great, but more often than not, they are related to capital cities and surrounds and not the regional areas of Australia...

I am wondering/hoping that there is such a site and would someone love to share this with me?

If not...then I hope some smart person will arrange for this information to be added for free to the real estate information pages (ie realestate.com and domain.com) for the regular people to see...not just the real estate agents....not asking for previous sales history of a particular property, but more so just the trends of a suburb over time.
Mark
Said this on 19-06-2010 At 04:05 pm
Hi Dani. I believe you cam check out. Www.myrpdata.com.au. And this should show youpast Years sales.
Greg
Said this on 19-06-2010 At 08:42 am
I have been a long time investor and now own a number of properties and do small developments.
Let's look at a house i purchased in 1978. It was in a suburban area that was close to ammenities in a main city of NSW. It cost $23000. I was earning about $150 a week as a apprentice. My parents and everyone else thought i was nuts. (do NOT buy now prices are going to drop.
In the 1979-1982 boom it doubled in value to be worth over $55k.
(Sure beat $150 p.w. as a apprentice)
Then again doubled in 1990 to over $120k. Then doubled again in 2000 to be worth over $300k. The home has never been vacant more than a couple of weeks. The area is now allowing units to be built so would easily suit 2 or 3 villas.

I have leveraged off this property to gradually expand a portfolio to include blocks of units, older houses to re-furb and new houses.
I am so grateful I did 'not follow the advice of my parents and expert work mates who had done nothing and still have done nothing. They just say i was lucky.

I have followed Michaels comments for years and read his books. On the whole Michael would have to be one of the most up to date and reliable commentators around.
Michael Yardney
Said this on 19-06-2010 At 08:48 am
WOW!
what can I say other than thanks for the kind words - you've made my day!
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