Posts Tagged ‘house’
The value of Aussie homes increased in the first quarter, bucking a global trend downwards, according to a recently issued report.
House and flat prices in Australia increased in value by 1.6% in the first three months of the year, helped by a scarcity of supply, lower interest rates and incentives to first-home buyers.
The slight recovery in Australia “has been driven by the 40% fall in home loan rates down to 5.7%, which are now at their lowest levels since July 1968!”
March’s three-month gain follows a 0.1% rise in the three months to February in the RP Data-Rismark’s national dwelling value index, and a 3% fall in the value of capital city homes in 2008.
The strength of Aussie home prices is a world away - so far - from the 2.7% drop in British home prices over the first quarter, capping a year to March 17.5% plunge.
US housing didn’t fare that much better, with prices in the top 20 cities sinking 1.9% in February, which brought the 12-month fall to 18.6%, according to the most recent S&P/Case-Shiller index, a widely followed measure.
RP Data-Rismark said the first-home buyer’s grant, ending June 30, has acted like a catalyst for new home buying in Australia, but lower interest rates are sustaining the market’s growth.
Increasing rents have boosted the housing component of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) by 0.9 per cent for the quarter and the overall annual increase to 5.5 per cent, that’s according to Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) figures released this week.
The CEO of Real Estate Institute of Australia has said, “The majority of this increase in the housing component was driven by rents, which increased nationally by 1.7 per cent over the quarter and 8.4 per cent over the year. The cities where rents increased the most were Perth and Darwin with annual increases of 10.9 per cent and 13.5 per cent respectively!”
This rent increase in the recent quarter reflects low vacancy rates and the scarcity of rental properties across capital cities, combined with the decrease in building approvals and housing finance for investment.
The National Rental Affordability Scheme should hopefully relieve this figure, however the impact won’t be felt for quite some time.
“With an underlying demand for additional housing at around 200,000 dwellings per year and commencement of new dwellings of 147,000 in 2008, Australia will need to build significantly more houses than what has occurred to meet rental demand.”
Whilst housing affordability improved since the Reserve Bank rate cuts, there’s really been very little flow-on benefit to those in the rental market.
“With lower interest rates and greater affordability, now would be an almost perfect time for those in the rental market to consider the purchase of their own home.”