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Sales of residential land in Australia falls as prices rise

Residential building land in Australia has increased in price but availability is falling, making it more and more difficult for builders to provide affordable housing, it is claimed. In the last quarter of 2015 the number of residential lot sales across Australia fell by 1.6% while the median lot prices increasing by 5.2% to $234,600, according to the latest edition of the HIA-CoreLogic RP Data residential land report. Land supply pressures were more pronounced in the capital cities, with lot sales falling by 2.3% during the quarter and the median lot price rising by some 6.6%. A breakdown of the figures show that vacant residential land sales are estimated to have fallen in Sydney by 22.3%, in Brisbane by 20.1% and in Perth by 7.2%. Elsewhere, the level of sales increased. In Melbourne sales were up by 13.2%, in Adelaide by 27.5% and in Hobart by 7.2%. ‘Conditions in the residential land market are making it more and more difficult to deliver the new housing stock that Australia needs. Once again, we’ve had another quarter of dwindling land lot sales and pretty stiff price increases which is evidence of insufficient supply,’ said Shane Garrett, HIA senior economist. ‘We need much greater emphasis on the delivery of new residential land supply involving better models for infrastructure delivery and a real sense of urgency in the planning process,’ he pointed out. ‘Housing costs are one of the biggest components of most households’ budgets and needlessly jacking land prices up through inaction on supply will make for real hardship over the long term,’ Garrett added. CoreLogic RP Data research director Tim Lawless, pointed out that the number of vacant land sales has fallen by 14% in 2015. ‘While the fall in vacant land transactions is substantial at a national level, the drop has been more severe across the capital cities where housing demand is the highest. Land sales were down 19% compared to the same quarter a year ago across the combined capitals,’ he said. ‘If the drop in land transactions was attributable to lower demand we would expect a commensurate fall in selling price. In fact the opposite is true; land prices are rising in the context of lower sales which suggests a supply shortage is at play,’ he added. ‘The ongoing challenge for state governments is to ensure a sufficient release of residential land that is located in desirable locations and well connected by transport infrastructure to major working centres and necessary amenities like schools, health care and retail precincts,’ he concluded. Continue reading

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Average rents in Scotland down 0.7% in March, biggest monthly fall on record

Average residential rents in Scotland fell by 0.7% in March, the first decline in six months and the biggest monthly drop on record, the latest index data shows. This took the typical rent in Scotland down to £544 per month and suppressed annual growth to just 1.1% in March, a significant downturn from 2.1% in the year to February 2016, according to the buy to let index from lettings agent network Your Move. Annual growth in the rental market is now at a 13 month low and Edinburgh was the only place to see rents rise in March to a new peak for the city of £645 a month. One reason for the growth in Edinburgh is a lack of available properties, according to Brian Moran, lettings director at Your Move Scotland. He believes, however, that rents could start to rise again with buy to let landlords now facing an additional 3% stamp duty and the effects of the new Private Tenancies Bill still to come. ‘What we do know, is that if landlords hit the brakes and cause a roadblock of supply in the private rented sector, tenants will be the casualties paying higher rents in the longer term,’ he said. Rents fell across the majority of Scotland. The steepest monthly drop in rents was experienced in Glasgow and Clyde, with the average rent in March 1.5% lower than in February, taking the average monthly rent to £544. In the Highlands and Islands there was a 1.4% fall in rents since February, and rents in the East dropped 0.8% on a monthly basis. The South of Scotland saw a more modest 0.2% dip in rents month on month. Edinburgh and the Lothians was the only region to buck this trend, with the average monthly rent climbing 0.2% to reach a new peak price of £645 per month in March. However, taking a longer term view, only two of the five regions of Scotland have seen rents fall on an annual basis. Edinburgh and the Lothians are continuing to see record annual rent rises, up 8.5% year on year in March. Rent growth in the capital has been accelerating steadily since June 2015. After this, rents in the South of Scotland have seen the next fastest annual rise, with rents up 3.2% since March 2015. The Highlands and Islands saw a 1.6% uptick in rents compared to a year ago. But two regions have seen rents fall compared to a year earlier. Both Glasgow and Clyde and the East of Scotland have witnessed a 2.5% drop in rents across the twelve months to March 2016. The index report also shows that despite the widespread monthly falls in rents in March, the proportion of late rent in Scotland has risen for the first time since October 2015. Reversing the recent trend of improving tenant finances, tenant arrears… Continue reading

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Rural locations becoming more attractive to home movers in the UK

People in the UK want to live in villages but the need to have easy access to shops, transport and medical facilities and good broadband, new research has found. Some 21% of people who are moving home said that they wanted to live in a village, making it easily the most popular type of location, compared to 14% for a market town and only 12% for either a big city or a suburb, according to the study by Strutt & Parker. The Housing Futures Report found that broadband and mobile connections are essential to rural life. Access to broadband was a key factor for 49% of those intending to move to a village, while 38% highlighted mobile connectivity. It reveals that with 60% want to be able to walk to shops, 48% close to local transport and 45% near to medical facilities. ‘The UK might seem to be focused on urbanisation but we believe a new, overlooked trend is set to shape Britain’s housing market over the coming decades and this is the desire to move back to rural locations,’ said Stephanie McMahon, head of research at Strutt & Parker. She explained that while some research would suggest cities have the upper hand over villages as the urban trend has gathered pace in the UK, a number of negative traits have begun to appear such as a rise in inadequate housing provision, urban sprawl and increased pollution. She pointed out that the shift away from cities is being driven by people looking for neighbourhood safety at 86%, while 58% want space between neighbours and 48% are looking for a strong community feel. The report also point out that technology is helping to change the rural economy, which plays a key role in creating jobs and prosperity. England’s rural economy now accounts for £210 billion of economic output and hosts over 25% of all registered businesses, according to DEFRA. New companies are thriving in rural locations, including hi-tech manufacturing, food processing, the service sector, retail and power supply. ‘The expansion of broadband and mobile communications has seen a greater uptake of working from home in rural locations compared to urban areas. It seems that the same factors that once drove urbanisation, improving economic and social conditions, are now inspiring the village revival,’ added McMahon. And it’s not just those wishing to sell up from their city lives to buy in a village setting, with the report showing a significant increase in respondents looking for rental accommodation. 10% of those wanting to move to a village would live in a professionally managed private rental unit, up from 1% in 2013. The South East, South West and North East are the three leading destinations for people who are intending to move in the next five years. London’s strong economy and housing market will have a direct effect on the South East, which… Continue reading

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