Tag Archives: australian
Detached home approvals in Australia reach five year high
Detached house approvals in Australia hit a five year high during April, according to the latest report from the Housing Industry Association, the voice of Australia’s residential building industry. During April, detached house approvals rose by 4.7% in seasonally adjusted terms to reach 10,264, the highest monthly total for detached house approvals since February 2010. However, HIA senior economist Shane Garrett pointed out that a weaker month for the multi-unit segment of the market actually drove total new dwelling approvals lower during April. In the month the total number of new dwelling approvals fell by 4.4% to 18,715 in seasonally adjusted terms. The reduction was driven by the multi-unit segment, with a 13.6% fall. The data also shows that the detached house market saw a total of 214,331 approvals recorded in the year to April, the highest 12 monthly total on record. ‘Strengthening activity in detached house building is crucial to broadening the base of the new home building recovery which has been largely contained to the multi-unit market to date,’ said Garrett. ‘It is important that policy settings allow the expansion in detached house building to deliver on its full economic potential,’ he added. A breakdown of the figures show that seasonally adjusted new dwelling approvals only increased in Tasmania with growth of 29.8%. Approvals declined in all the other states, with the largest monthly reductions occurring in New South Wales with a fall of 14.6%, Queensland down 14.2% and South Australia down 10.3%. New dwelling approvals also declined in Western Australia by 3% and in Victoria by 2.2% while in trend terms, new dwelling approvals increased in the ACT during April by 8.4% and fell by 6.2% in the Northern Territory. Continue reading
New Zealand sees strongest new home figures for almost a decade
New building consents in New Zealand have increased to the country’s strongest house building rate for nine years, according to the latest official figures. Housing supply is increasing particularly in Auckland and Christchurch, according to Building and Housing Minister Nick Smith, with 25,000 plus new consents per year nationally. The latest annual figure of 25,038 compares to the low of 13,236 following the global financial crisis. A breakdown of the figures shows there were 756 new building consents for Auckland in March, which compares to just 209 per month before and 7,940 building consents in the year to March 2015 in Auckland, the highest since 2006. ‘We are well on the way to recovering the 10,500 homes lost to the earthquakes in Canterbury, with another record set for building consents. The 588 consents issued last month confirms the Government's view that the Christchurch housing market will have supply and demand back in balance by 2017/2018,’ said Smith. ‘These positive signs follow a general pattern of strong growth that has continued for almost four years. They confirm the latest GDP data showing a $9.5 billion annual investment in residential construction – an all-time high. It shows that the Government's programme of measures to increase housing supply is working,’ he added. Smith also pointed out that there are now Housing Accords in place with six local councils to free up more land faster. ‘We have initiatives in place to constrain building materials costs, rein in development contributions, cut compliance costs and invest in improved sector productivity,’ he said. He explained that the new $435 million HomeStart support package, which came into effect 01 April, is projected to assist 90,000 people into home ownership. ‘This is good progress but with strong net migration data from fewer New Zealanders leaving, we need to keep doing more. The next steps in our programme include our planned second phase of reforms to the Resource Management Act and place based initiatives like those announced today at Tamaki. The Government remains committed to supporting more New Zealanders into their own home,’ he concluded. Continue reading
Sales of new homes in Australia at their highest since 2010
The new homes sector in Australia has seen strong growth in March 2015, taking sales volumes to their highest level since early 2010, according to the latest survey. Overall new home sales were up 4.4%. There was an 11.3% rise in multi-unit sales and a 2.6% rise in detached home sales in March, according to the latest new home sales report covering the largest volume builders by the Housing Industry Association. ‘The monthly rise in both the detached and multi-unit segments of the market is an encouraging result. However, the broader trend is that growth over the past year has been driven by multi-unit sales, while detached house sales have tracked sideways,’ said HIA economist Diwa Hopkins. ‘The residential construction sector continues to be the main bright spot in the broader domestic economy, with updates to the sector showing its ongoing strength. Lower lending rates will provide added support to residential construction activity, which is emerging as a key area of growth mitigating the effects of the downturn in mining investment and construction,’ she added. A breakdown of the figures show that detached house sales increased by 5.9% in Victoria, 4.2% in New South Wales and also 4.2% in Western Australia. They declined by 5.8% in South Australia and by 2.3% in Queensland. In the March 2015 quarter, detached house sales increased by 5.2% in Victoria and by 4.3% in Queensland. In Western Australia they fell by 6.4%, in New South Wales by 3.6% and in South Australia by 1.4%. However, the latest renovations report from the HIA shows that this sector of the property market is struggling. Over the past three years the volume of renovations activity has fallen by 15%. The performance of South Australia typified the national trend. Over the 2012/2013 period, renovations activity the state declined from $2.10 billion to $1.78 billion, a drop of 15.1%. ‘The importance of the home renovations market is often underestimated. Valued at $29.66 billion during 2014, the renovations sector accounts for over one third of all residential construction activity and about 2% of GDP,’ said HIA senior economist Shane Garrett. ‘Big ticket expenditure items like home renovation jobs tend to suffer disproportionately at times when economic growth is slow and when unemployment is drifting upwards. The deceleration of wages growth to its lowest rate in almost two decades has also challenged the renovations sector,’ he explained. The report envisages a further decline of 2.8% in renovations activity during 2015. However, activity will experience an 8.2% uplift between 2015 and 2018, as a result of low interest rates and the gradual recovery of economic activity. Continue reading