Tag Archives: australian
Rental prices in Spain fall for 34th month in a row
Rental values in Spain are continuing to fall with the latest figures showing that average rents fell by 0.4% in January compared to the same month of 2015, the 34th month in a row of declines. The data from the National Statistics Institute (INE) shows that rents fell in all regions except in Galicia where they increased by 0.3%, the Balearic Islands and Catalonia both up 0.1%, ad were static in Murcia and Navarra. The most significant fall in rental prices were in La Rioja where they were down by 2% while in Castilla y Leónand Castilla-La Mancha rents fell by 0.9%, were down 0.8% in Madrid and Extremadura and down 0.7% in Asturias and Valencia. The regions of Andalucía and Aragón registered the same rate of decline as the national average at 0.4%, while in Cantabria rents fell by 0.3% and the Canary Islands, the Basque Country and Ceuta all recorded declines of 0.2%. But in the buying and selling market the news is more positive with the INE data showing that the Spanish housing market grew by 11% last year after bottoming out in 2014. There were 318,055 home sales last year, the first time sales have risen above 300,000 a year, and following 260,000 in 2012 and 2013. But sales are still considerably below the 700,000 recorded before the global economic downturn in 2007. In terms of percentage growth, the housing market expanded by 11% last year, after rising 4% in 2014, and according to Mark Stucklin of Spanish Property Insight this suggests that the market has finally turned around. The crash in sales started back in 2008, and declined in five of the six years between 2008 and 2013, with dramatic double digit falls in most of those years. However, looking just at December, sales were up 8% year on year, meaning the market expanded every month in 2015, the first year that has happened since the crisis began. There were 77,865 new home sales registered last year, and 276,267 resales, meaning that resales were 78% of the market, down from parity as recently as 2013. ‘The new homes market has failed to recover as quickly as resales in part due to a lack of new developments on offer, though sales may start to recovery this year as more new projects come on stream,’ Stucklin explained. Of the selected regions most of interest to foreign buyers, Barcelona’s property market increased the most last year, up by 20%, but new home sales fell 20% while resales were up 32%. This was followed by Cadiz province, Las Palmas in the Canaries and the Balearics all up 15%. Indeed, all regions were positive with the exception of Huelva, home to the North Western end of the Costa de la Luz, also known as the Spanish Algarve, where they fell by 2%. ‘The Spanish property market now looks to be on a growth path after years in crisis. Sales growth was particularly… Continue reading
High property land prices in Australian capital cities bringing sales down
There is strong evidence of intensifying supply constraints in the residential land market in Australia, especially in the country’s state capital cities. The number of residential lot sales fell by 2.7% in the third quarter of 2015 while median lot prices rose by 4.2%, according to the report from the Housing Industry Association and real estate analytics company CoreLogic RP Data. The index report explains that the tightening of market conditions was concentrated in the capital cities, where prices increased by 5.4% but the number of lots transacted actually fell by 4.5%. According to Shane Garrett, HIA senior economist, with the Australian population now over 24 million for the first time, the report provides a sobering indictment of how land supply policy is not keeping pace with the housing needs of a growing population. ‘The combination of strong land price growth yet declining transaction volumes are hallmarks of a market constrained by supply bottlenecks. Ineffective land supply policy will limit Australia’s long term growth potential and erode competitiveness by forcing costs up,’ he explained. ‘The key supply side issues like planning delays, efficient infrastructure provision and the mammoth taxation burden on new housing need urgent attention. Otherwise, living standards for Australia’s 24 million residents will never reach their full potential,’ he added. According to CoreLogic RP Data research director Tim Lawless, the number of vacant land sales has been trending lower since reaching a recent peak over the June quarter of 2014, with the median land price continuing to push higher despite lower volumes. ‘Buyer demand across the vacant land market has remained strong, which is why prices are rising on lower sales, however, as land prices rise it is likely block sizes will have to reduce in order to maintain an affordable price point for buyers,’ he said. He pointed out that median lot prices have risen across every capital city over the past 12 months except for Adelaide where they fell by 1%. The tight supply of land across Sydney has seen median land prices rise by the most of any capital city over the past year, up 22.8% compared with a weighted average across the capitals of 10.7% growth. ‘Despite having the most expensive housing and vacant land, Sydney is currently showing the second largest median lot size amongst the capital cities at 537 square metres. Somewhat counterintuitively, the median land area has historically been the smallest in Adelaide, with the September quarter data showing a median lot size of just 375 square metres,’ Lawless said. Continue reading
New home sales and lending in Australia ended 2015 strongly
Seasonally adjusted new home sales in Australia finished last year strongly, recording a 6% increase in December, according to the latest data from the Housing Industry Association. The growth has bee driven by both the detached house and multi-unit segments of the market. Data shows detached house sales increased by 2.2% while multi-unit sales were up by 21.1%. HIA chief economist Harley Dale said the current healthy national construction volumes are expected to continue throughout the first half of 2016 but there are likely to be very large differences in new housing conditions across States. ‘The updates we receive for leading indicators in coming months will be closely watched to determine the magnitude of any risk that the second half of 2016 is materially weaker for new home building than the first half of the year,’ he added. A breakdown of the figures show that detached house sales increased in three of the five mainland states, up 5.2% in Queensland, up 5% in Western Australia and up 1.1% in Victoria. Sales fell 2.1% in South Australia and by 0.1% in New South Wales. During the December 2015 quarter detached house sales increased in Queensland by 4.3% and by 0.3% in New South Wales. Sales fell 15.4% in Western Australia, 10.2% in South Australia and 4% in Victoria. Meanwhile, the latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics show that the monthly volume of new home loans to owner occupiers hit a six year high during December 2015. That means that the pipeline of new home building is likely to remain strong during early 2016, according to HIA senior economist, Shane Garrett. He pointed out that the December data is the best since November 2009. ‘This time around, new home building is benefitting from record low official interest rates, strong demographic demand and resurgent labour markets in New South Wales and Victoria,’ he added. During December, the number of owner occupier loans for the construction of new homes increased by 1.8% with growth of 12.4% in loans for newly constructed homes. Compared with a year earlier, total owner occupier loans for the construction and purchase of new dwellings are 5.3% higher. ‘During November, the major banks unilaterally increased their variable mortgage interest rates. While the figures seem to suggest no immediate impact on new home lending, the risk remains that such tactics could undermine our industry’s ability to meet Australia’s long term housing needs,’ Garrett explained. A breakdown of the figures shows that the number of new home loans increased, in annual terms, most strongly in the Northern Territory with growth of 29.3%, up 21.7% in New South Wales and up 12.3% in Victoria. New home lending volumes also rose in Queensland by 4% but lending volumes fell in Tasmania by 29.6%, in Western Australia by 19.8% and in the Australian Capital Territory by 0.5%. Continue reading