Tag Archives: markets
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
US residential rents set to slowdown in 2016
Residential rent growth in the United States is expected to level off over the next 12 months, slowing to an annual rate of 1.1% by December 2016. The average at the end of 2016 is projected to be $1,396 compared to $1,381 in December 2015, according to the latest rent forecast from real estate data firm Zillow. The firm is forecasting a decrease in the rate of rental appreciation amid a rental affordability crisis that has renters in some markets spending almost half of their income on rent. Some of the fastest growing metros had double digit annual rental appreciation at the end of 2015 and Zillow expects rental appreciation to slow down most significantly in Nashville, San Francisco, Portland and Denver. Rents in San Francisco saw a 12.5% rise in 2015 and the Zillow forecast is for growth in San Francisco to be 5.9% in 2016, half as fast as in 2015. Even with the slowdown, rents will remain unaffordable in many of the major markets across the US, especially on the West Coast. Renters in San Francisco and Los Angeles can expect to spend 40% of their income on a rental payments. ‘Hot markets are still going to be hot in 2016, but rents won't rise as quickly as they have been. The slowdown in rental appreciation will provide some relief for renters who've been seeing their rents rise dramatically every single year for the past few years. However, the situation remains tough on the ground and rents are still rising and renters are struggling to keep up,’ said Zillow chief economist Dr. Svenja Gudell. She pointed out that the slowdown in rental appreciation indicates that supply of new multi-family homes is catching up to demand. Substantial new housing supply is becoming available in Atlanta, Denver, Portland, Seattle, and other markets. Continue reading
Buying is still cheaper than renting in many US housing markets
Buying a home in the United States is still more affordable than renting in the majority of markets, according to the latest analysis from real estate data firm RealtyTrac. But the opposite is true in markets with the biggest increase in the millennial share of the population over the last six years, the research also shows. In the 473 counties covered by the research, the fair market rent for a three bedroom property in 2015 needed an average of 27% of median household income, while buying a median priced home required an average of 25% of median household income based on the median sales price in November. Buying a median priced home was more affordable than renting a three bedroom property in 68% of the counties analysed, representing 57% of the total population in those counties. But in the 25 counties with the biggest increase in millennials between 2007 and 2013, fair market rents for a three bedroom property in 2015 required 30% of the median household income on average while buying a median priced home required 36% of median household income on average. For the analysis millennials were defined as anyone born between 1977 and 1992. ‘First time buyers and potential boomerang home buyers are stuck between a rock and a hard place in today’s housing market. Many of the markets with the jobs and amenities they want have hard-to-afford rents and even harder to afford home prices while the more affordable markets have fewer well-paying jobs and tend to be off the beaten path,’ said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. ‘Those emerging markets with the combination of good jobs, good affordability and a growing population of new renters and potential first time buyers represent the best opportunities for buy and hold real estate investors to buy low and benefit from rising rents in the years to come,’ he added. The top markets with the biggest increase in the percentage of millennials over the past seven years were counties in Washington D.C., San Francisco and Denver, all of which saw an increase of more than 50% in the share of the population that is millennials. Other markets in the top 25 for biggest increase in millennials included counties in New York, Nashville, Portland, St. Louis, Seattle, Charlotte, Minneapolis, Indianapolis, Atlanta, Orlando, Austin, Des Moines and Midland, Texas. The average 2015 fair market rent in these top 25 counties is $1,459, some 19% above the national average for all counties analysed, the data also shows. On average 2015 fair rents increased 3% from a year ago in these counties, with the standouts being Denver County and Midland County, Texas, both of which saw fair market rents increase more than 2%. Median home prices increased 8% from a year ago in these counties on average compared to an average 7% increase among all counties analysed nationwide while the average unemployment rate among these counties was 5.2% in October compared to an average of 5.5% for all… Continue reading