you're looking at and relying on misleading figures there.
The data merely tells us what it tells us Lisa - that around half of the houses in the 4.5 million person metropolis called Sydney are valued at less than $600 000. Which is still very expensive for the person of average means.
we HAVE to exclude the "bogan" regions from the equation BEFORE we begin any worthwhile analysis.
You cannot exclude millions of people from the analysis simply because some of them are decked out in flanelette and ugg boots. If you do, then you are referring only to what average property in the upper half costs and you and I are therefore not even talking about the same thing. When I say "Sydney", I mean the whole thing, not selected, better off areas.
Buying real estate to live in or rent out .. is and will always be an impt business venture
Well I would agree that buying to rent out would be considered a business venture. I would not consider simply seeking ownership of the roof over my family's head as such but this would be a whole other topic in itself.
Oh and million dollar mortgages are nothing new here in Sydney right now. Most of my friends and rels (including myself) have one.
Yes, you've said this before. However, you've also said that your friends all have university qualifications (from the same univesity that prime ministers send their kids to?) and are mainly employed in building and teaching (I'm thinking more along the lines of engineer and university lecturer rather than brickie and classroom teacher at a public school?), law and medicine. Exactly what portion of households do you think might have one of this high-earning professions as a breadwinner?
Of course lawyers and doctors and engineers have much bigger mortgages than most - they have much bigger salaries than most. As a percentage of income earners, they constitute a minority.
I think JM is right regarding affordability. First, $150 000 is quite a lot more than your average household with
both partners working brings in. Second, does this person actually have all that money available to spend? We almost universally refer to taxable income as though it were what we actually see in our hand. It is not. Looking our income on our payslips, at first glance my wife and I could fairly easily afford a $500 000 mortgage. But immediately, something doesn’t seem right. We just don’t have that much money per month because the tax man takes a chunk of that headline figure, leaving us with significantly less. A person with a real, after tax disposable income of $150 000 would be earning a headline amount a lot greater than that.
Of course you need a deposit. You need at least 20%.
I personally recommend 30% <-- if you intend living in the home.
I couldn't agree more with your reccomendation. However, you most certainly do not need a 20% deposit to get a mortgae loan (though the recent NCCP may have altered this somewhat). Prices are now so high that the average income earning couple would struggle to be able to stump up such a deposit. What are the chances of an average earning couple with a real, disposable combined income of $90 000 being able to save up a $100 000 deposit?