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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Australian housing isn't the one-way road to riches it once was

    [SYDNEY] For the past two decades, Australia's housing market has mostly been a one-way bet on rising prices.


    Now, with the effects of coronavirus shutdowns reverberating through the economy and the nation set for its worst recession in 90 years, the concept that owning property is a licence to print money is under threat.


    While the Covid-19 pandemic has upended property markets from Canada to Singapore, Australia is more vulnerable than most to a housing slump. It has one of the world's highest levels of household debt, the nation's banks are heavily exposed to mortgage lending, and many mom and pop investors rely on income from rental properties, which are also under pressure.


    "Australia's had an obsession with residential property for a long time," said Richard Holden, professor of economics at the University of New South Wales. "A lot of people have a lot of their wealth tied up in residential property. I'm pretty worried."

    Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the nation's largest home lender, estimates that under a short, sharp economic downturn this year followed by a quick recovery next year, house prices will fall 11 per cent by March 2023. In the worst-case scenario of a prolonged recession, prices could plunge 32 per cent.

    That's a marked reversal from before coronavirus hit, when house prices were back near boom-time peaks, having rebounded rapidly since a 21-month slump bottomed out in June. Longer term, home values have tripled since the turn of the century, propelling Sydney and Melbourne into the ranks of the world's least-affordable places to buy.


    RESCUE PACKAGE


    To help avoid a calamitous decline, banks have rolled out a huge assistance package, with almost 430,000 borrowers given a six-month payment holiday. All up, banks have deferred A$211 billion (S$196.19 billion) of loans, including to businesses. Meantime, more than six million workers are receiving government wage subsidies of A$1,500 every two weeks.


    That has helped avoid a flood of forced sales that could drag down the entire market. Property listings in Sydney are down 27 per cent from a year ago, according to data provider CoreLogic.


    Along with would-be buyers vying for a smaller number of properties, there's other factors helping prop up the market. Interest rates are at a record low, and most of the hundreds of thousands of jobs lost are concentrated among younger people in low-income work like hospitality and retail, who tend not to be homeowners.


    And after a brief pause during the height of social-distancing restrictions, open-house inspections and public auctions have restarted.


    "The banks, and by extension the housing market, are fairly well firewalled at present, and it would take a lot to outweigh this," said Tamar Hamlyn, co-founder of fixed-income investor Ardea Investment Management. "The most likely scenario is slowly lower prices in a low-turnover market, as in the absence of any forced selling it's quite likely that the various buffers in place can prevent a shakeout for the time being."


    AFTERSHOCK


    Still, even as Australia starts to emerge from the shutdowns, the after-effects will linger for years. The central bank expects unemployment will peak at 10 per cent this quarter, be at 9 per cent at the end of this year, and hold above 6.5 per cent for the next two years.


    And while banks are going all out to support existing borrowers, they are tightening the screws on new customers, placing less weight on variable income like bonuses and overtime when assessing borrowing capacity, and being ultra-cautious about people who work in hard-hit industries.


    "Banks aren't going to lend based on a 'future return to normality', they will lend on the now," said Redom Syed, the founder of mortgage broker Confidence Finance. "A major shock to lending markets is coming."


    Then there's the sudden drying up of immigration, which has been one of the key drivers of house prices, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne where new arrivals tend to settle.


    On a net basis, more than 470,000 immigrants moved to Australia over the past two years. Now, with borders shut and international travel unlikely to resume anytime soon, the government is forecasting immigration will slump 85 per cent in the year starting July 1.


    "Migration is going to the biggest feature of what drives housing market dynamics," said Paul Bloxham, chief economist for Australia at HSBC Holdings, and a former central bank official. "We see weaker demand for owner-occupied property, weaker demand for rental property and weaker demand for property for students."


    Landlords are also facing an uncertain future. Unlike in the US and Europe where big firms such as Blackstone Group and Vonovia own thousands of apartments, Australia's rental market is largely a cottage industry of mom and pop landlords. For many, the monthly rent doesn't cover their loan payments - and instead they count on tax breaks and price growth to turn a profit.


    That leaves them in a precarious position if tenants can't pay rent. While evictions have been suspended for six months, there is no financial support for renters, and instead the government has urged landlords and tenants to negotiate rent breaks themselves.


    Meantime, tens of thousands of international students are stranded overseas, leaving their rental apartments empty, while the shuttering of tourism has seen AirBnB units flood back to the market.


    SYDNEY RENTS


    "We are well aware of a surge in short-term accommodation now being advertised for long-term leasing," said Louis Christopher, managing director at consultancy SQM Research.


    Rents in Sydney have fallen about 6 per cent from a year ago, and will decline further if high vacancy rates are sustained, he said. "That's good news for tenants but a disaster for landlords."


    Then there's the question of what happens later this year when the government and banks start to unwind the extraordinary level of support propping up the economy. With a household debt-to-income ratio of 187 per cent, Australia is one of the most indebted countries in the developed world.


    "That's the cliff edge," said Sarah Hunter, chief Australia economist at BIS Oxford Economics. "If the economic recovery isn't established by then, there is the risk of a big stumble."


    BLOOMBERG

    Australian housing isn't the one-way road to riches it once was, Real Estate - THE BUSINESS TIMES

  2. #2
    Thailand Expat Saint Willy's Avatar
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    There most certainly is a cliff edge looking in Australian property.

  3. #3
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    So the chinkies will be snapping up a few bargains then.

  4. #4
    Hangin' Around cyrille's Avatar
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    Christ, here he goes again...

  5. #5
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    It's all going over your head innit Sybil.

    SYDNEY (BLOOMBERG) - Rich Chinese investors are finding luxury real estate is a good hiding place from the economic fallout of the coronavirus.
    Across China and in some of their familiar hunting grounds in Asia, wealthy buyers are snapping up top-end housing, in many cases to guard their wealth against anticipated inflation and a weakening yuan. The rush to add real estate has led to a jump in upmarket housing prices in China, while offering some support for Asian property markets hit hard by the pandemic.
    "It's been flat-out," said Monika Tu, founder of Black Diamondz, an Australian company that caters to Chinese buyers of luxury real estate.
    Since March, Tu has sold A$85 million (S$79.3 million) of prime property, with about half the sales to Chinese clients who were in Australia when the pandemic hit. That's a 25 per cent jump from earlier in the year. The homes, priced between A$7.25 million and A$19.5 million, are all in Sydney's well-heeled, ocean-front suburbs such as Point Piper.
    A gradual easing of virus restrictions is making it easier for wealthy Chinese to view properties and complete purchases in nearby Asian hot spots like Shanghai, Seoul and Sydney.
    In another favourite Singapore, virtual tours and photos have been enough to seal multi-million dollar deals, pointing to how transactions are evolving. That's in contrast to London and New York where real estate remains sluggish amid lockdowns.


    Chinese buyer inquiries for South Korean property increased 180 per cent in the first quarter compared with the fourth quarter of 2019, while inquiries on New Zealand homes jumped 75 per cent, according to data from Juwai Iqi, a real estate firm. Searches dropped 32 per cent in the UK and 18 per cent in the US.

    Chinese buyers are rushing back into the Australian property market as prices fall and the Australian dollar takes a beating due to the coronavirus crisis, industry experts say.
    Prices have fallen by around 10 per cent since the start of the crisis in some places, with some predicting falls of up to 30 per cent as unemployment rises into the double digits for the first time in decades.
    "A lot of the mainland Chinese are seeing this as an opportunity to exploit a great deal because that's what they're going to see in the property market in the next six months," real estate industry adviser Robert Klaric told Nine’s A Current Affair.
    “What we'll see is the wealthy mainland Chinese will look towards Australia now to secure their wealth, and secure their health.”
    He added, “They have a lifestyle here, they have freedom and they can protect their wealth from the Chinese Communist Party.”
    Property prices and consumer sentiment have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in major cities like Melbourne and Sydney where demand is driven by overseas investment.
    However some, such as investment expert Richard Sheppard, believe prices in areas like Sydney won’t go any lower.
    Rich Chinese investors snapping up luxury homes from Singapore to Sydney, Property News & Top Stories - The Straits Times



    Coronavirus Australia: Chinese property buyers flooding back in

  6. #6
    Thailand Expat David48atTD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    So the chinkies will be snapping up a few bargains then.
    China's foreign investors have abandoned the Australian property market in droves, replaced by a surge in the number of buyers from the US. ... North America accounted for $32.8 billion worth of foreign investment in Australian real estate last financial year while China claimed investment worth just $6 billion.May 8, 2020
    https://www.domain.com.au/news/chine...estors-954319/

  7. #7
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    "last financial year"



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