http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011 ... 194579.htmLand sales fall to 10-year low
Australian residential land sales have reached their lowest level in a decade, after almost halving from a year earlier, a housing report shows.
The HIA-RP Data Residential Land Report found the volume of land sales fell sharply in the December quarter, with sales down 40.4 per cent compared to the same period in 2009.
The fall in sales comes as the weighted median land value for Australia grew 4.1 per cent in the quarter to $194,161, the report found.
Over the year to December 2010, the median value was up 5.9 per cent.
HIA economist Matthew King says the results highlight the ongoing deterioration in new home affordability.
The last paragraph in bold says it all as far as I'm concerned. And rising prices on falling sales volumes are a classic sign of something in a bubble, though it is obviously more complex than that. We have had the floods etc. However, they mainly only occurred in QLD and VIC while the industry languishes over most of the country - were there floods in Perth or Adelaide? Also, the December quater results were recorded before most of the flooding. Overall, things began turning south in about May last year.
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs. ... nt&src=rssExperts question fall in property pricesProperty experts have questioned new data that shows the median Australian house price has fallen as much as six per cent in 2011, according to Smart Company.
The Real Estate Institute of Victoria released its quarterly median house price for March last week, which it said had fallen six per cent to $565,000 in the three months to March.
But Louis Christopher, from property research company SQM Research, told Smart Company that the REIV data could be skewed by large fluctuations in certain suburbs.
"I don't think house prices have fallen that far in a quarter," Mr Christopher, who has forecast prices to decline by five per cent, told the website.
"But the drop in Melbourne house prices is clearly on
I thought it was just Melbourne where the price fall was mentioned, though the Gold and Sunshine coasts have taken a hammering, up to 20% in some places. And unemployment in Gold coast city is rising sharply as the flow of credit money into the broader local economy slows down as a result.
Louis Christopher is a respected man in property circles so I tend to believe him when he says the fall may be exaggerated. However, he remains bearish overall.
I have some correspondence every now and then with a Brisbane mortgage broker. Though we are on opposite sides of the debate, I respect his calm, rational approach to arguing. There’s no emotional outbursts or trash talk from him. However, there is one question that I don’t feel he has ever satisfactorily answered, giving brief dodging or brushing off–type answers – how much more can the average person keep paying for housing? Prices have risen so high that the average (I’m aware of the differences between mean, median and average but they are very slippery terms, each with multiple definitions in this particular case so I’ll just use “average”) household now needs to sacrifice at least 50% of their income to service the average mortgage. Official mortgage stress – arbitrary though the figure may be – begins at 35%. This isn’t a 12 month interest free loan from Harvey Norman we’re talking about here – it’s for the rest of a person or couple’s working life. How much longer can prices continue to increase faster than incomes?
I should point out that I have nothing against landlords or property investors. Many people I know either are or have been one. But at the end of the day, houses were not invented to make investors rich - they were invented to fulfil the basic human need of shelter from the elements. What purpose is served by allowing prices to rise so high through lightly restricted credit issuance, that the average person is beginning to struggle to afford ownership of a roof over their head?
We have poured massive sums of money into housing. And it’s not money we have, it’s money we owe. If it was used to do something productive then that might be justifiable but it has been used to do nothing more than hugely inflate the price of existing assets. This approach has destroyed other economies – the nominal wealth has simply evaporated as prices collapsed but the debt and the servicing commitments to it remain as a millstone around the neck for a long time to come.
Interesting times.