Property Institute housing predictions for 2018

Property Institute housing predictions for 2018

0 개 2,298 KoreaPost

Following a 100% ‘hit rate’ on its housing market predictions for 2017 – the Property Institute has now released its predictions for 2018.

 

According to Institute CEO, Ashley Church, the cost of renting will replace the price of housing as the #1 housing issue in 2018 – and the housing polices of the new Government, combined with uncertainty around housing investment over the next few years, will ‘scare’ some property investors out of the market - creating a growing crisis in the number of dwellings available for rental.

 

The full list of predictions are as follows:

 

  1. Some Property Investors will abandon the market and the impact of this, on the availability of rentals, will start to become a problem in the second half of 2018

 

“While the cycles of property investment are largely predictable – there are always a number of less experienced property investors who panic, and sell, when a market flattens - or who decide not to invest further during downturns. This means that an increasing number of rentals will convert to owner occupied dwellings – putting pressure on the rental market at a time when the demand for housing (rental and owner occupied) is already acute. This trend is already noticeable in the dramatic reduction in new investor mortgages observed in the Monthly Property Institute / Valocity Regional Trends reports in the latter half of 2017”.

 

  1. The cost of renting will continue to rise and this will replace the cost of housing as the number one housing issue in 2018

 

“While it’s normal to see rent increases in the period following a property boom – the environment in which they will take place in 2018 will be made worse as a result of the combined effect of unusually high inward migration (which has exacerbated rental demand), loan to value restrictions (which have closed investors out of the market) and Labour’s plans for Capital Gains taxes, ring-fenced tax losses and significant new compliance costs (which will cause many property investors to increase rents to offset new costs - real or feared). As a result, we’re in for big rent increases in some parts of the country over the next couple of years – with those increases already showing up in the Property Institute Regional Insights Report”.

 

  1. House prices will continue to flatten through 2018 – but there will be no ‘crash’ in property prices

 

“The latest Property Institute / Valocity Regional Insights report shows that median house price growth across the country is down to 0.6% year on year. This is consistent with the end of a property cycle and overall prices (particularly in Auckland) will now ‘see-saw’ between small increases and small decreases throughout 2018. There will be isolated exceptions to this trend (both up and down) around the country – but the much hyped ‘property crash’ isn’t going to happen. We also note that the latest Property Institute / Valocity data shows expensive houses continuing to sell and hold up the median house price numbers – and we don’t see that trend changing much”.

 

  1. Longer term Mortgage interest rates will continue to rise. Expect further increases of up to 0.5% or more

 

“As was the case in 2017, the general consensus is that interest rates are on their way up – partly because of uncertainty around international events, and partly because NZ banks will need to pay more to attract a diminishing fund of investment from kiwi depositors. Expect to see little change in six-month to two-year mortgage rates – but a jump of up to 0.5% (or more) in longer term rates as banks try and woo borrowers into shorter terms in anticipation of further increases in the cost of funding over the next two or three years”.

 

  1. New home construction in Auckland will slowly increase – but most of it will be for owner occupiers

 

“Depending on your source, Auckland either needs 40,000 new homes ‘right now’ or 10,000 per year for the foreseeable future. Either way, the market will continue to make further progress on this target in 2018 but will still fall a long way short of the number of dwellings required to ‘fix’ the shortage. These houses will be built through a combination of Government building initiatives and private sector construction of apartments and free-standing homes. Most of these dwellings will end up in the hands of owner occupiers with very few becoming rentals for the reasons outlined in the previous predictions”.

 

  1. The Loan-to-Value rules will be further relaxed

 

“The cyclic flattening in house prices will give the Reserve Bank confidence to further relax the LVR deposit rules on Investors and also give relief to Home Buyers in 2018. The LVR for Investors will drop to 30% during 2018 – while the LVR for Home Buyers will either be dropped to 10% or 15% (although this may be limited to First Home Buyers) or the ‘speed limit’ (the extent to which trading banks can have clients who exceed this limit) will be significantly increased”.

 

Property Institute / Valocity Regional Insights Report

 

Meanwhile – the New Zealand housing market has continued to maintain a holding pattern according to

the latest results of the Property Institute / Valocity Regional Insights report.

 

According to the report, the median sales price across New Zealand strengthened marginally to $503k in December (up from $483k in November) while sales volumes, nationwide, continue to track down with 4,942 properties sold in December 2017 – a 44% drop on the same period last year.

 

Mr Church also notes that, according to Valocity data, first home buyers are still accounting for around 28% of all new mortgages across the country – while ‘refinanciers’ now represent 22% of all new lending.

 

OTHER HEADLINE RESULTS FROM THE REPORT

 

  • The National median sales price has strengthened slightly since last month, however the rate of annual growth remains flat (currently sitting at 0.6%)
  • Wellington experienced the biggest year-on-year growth (3.8%) while Auckland went backwards with median sales prices dipping by 1.2%
  • Nationwide value levels appear to be supported at present by strong proportions of ‘high value’ properties (27.2% of sales transacted above $800,000) – having the effect of ‘propping’ up the median statistic.
  • First home buyers still account for the majority of new mortgage registrations, (27.7% during the period). Interestingly ‘Refinancers’ comprise the second largest proportion accounting for 22.5%, suggesting that people are opting to capitalise on equity growth and ‘lock in’ interest rates, fueled by speculation of possible rates rises (although this figure has been fairly consistent for most of the past year).
  • In terms of total sales, small investors (those with 3-5 properties) make up 10.3% of property buyers, large investors (those with more than six properties) make up 9.1% of property buyers while first home buyers account for 41.1% of total buyers.
  • Sales volumes continue their downwards trend, significantly below the same period last year – down from the lofty peaks of May 2016 (11,249 sales) to fewer than 5,000 (4,942 sales) in this latest data set. (Since May 2016 - sales volumes have more than halved).

 

Ends 

House prices flatten in April

댓글 0 | 조회 414 | 4일전
Home value growth in Aote… 더보기

Government cuts put 130 jobs on the line at K…

댓글 0 | 조회 326 | 4일전
The Government's cuts to … 더보기

Borrowers bet on rate cuts by locking in shor…

댓글 0 | 조회 563 | 2024.04.18
Kiwi borrowers are bettin… 더보기

Business as usual for cash rate and housing m…

댓글 0 | 조회 267 | 2024.04.10
Commentary by CoreLogic N… 더보기

Residential recovery sluggish in first quarte…

댓글 0 | 조회 262 | 2024.04.09
Residential property valu… 더보기

Soft start for NZ housing market in March qua…

댓글 0 | 조회 625 | 2024.04.04
CoreLogic's House Price I… 더보기

The new-build premium could be about to shrin…

댓글 0 | 조회 330 | 2024.03.30
We estimate that new-buil… 더보기

STARS OF TV AND SYMPHONY ALIGN FOR CHILDREN’S…

댓글 0 | 조회 369 | 2024.03.19
Howls of What's the time … 더보기

Housing recovery spreads to nearly 60% of NZ …

댓글 0 | 조회 408 | 2024.03.14
Property values rose in a… 더보기

Annual growth back in black despite flat Febr…

댓글 0 | 조회 453 | 2024.03.12
Property values are sligh… 더보기

No OCR change... for now

댓글 0 | 조회 726 | 2024.02.28
Today's decision by the R… 더보기

Construction cost growth continuing to cool

댓글 0 | 조회 337 | 2024.02.28
The average cost of build… 더보기

Property sale volumes remain erratic

댓글 0 | 조회 621 | 2024.02.20
High mortgage rates conti… 더보기

Home values continue to strengthen, slowly bu…

댓글 0 | 조회 728 | 2024.02.13
The housing market's slow… 더보기

Profitable resales rise for the first time in…

댓글 0 | 조회 628 | 2024.02.08
93.3% of property resales… 더보기

MetService launches push notifications for Ne…

댓글 0 | 조회 564 | 2024.01.25
From today 25 January, Ki… 더보기

Property market signs off 2023 on a strong no…

댓글 0 | 조회 521 | 2024.01.17
The CoreLogic House Price… 더보기

Heat comes out of the construction sector as …

댓글 0 | 조회 434 | 2024.01.11
As pressures on residenti… 더보기

What the shortened Brightline test means for …

댓글 0 | 조회 528 | 2023.12.21
Following the Government’… 더보기

Housing upturn broadens, but underwhelming 20…

댓글 0 | 조회 732 | 2023.12.20
TheCoreLogic NZ December … 더보기

Slow recovery to be continued in 2024

댓글 0 | 조회 564 | 2023.12.19
The housing market contin… 더보기

New Zealanders' Standard of Living in Freefal…

댓글 0 | 조회 964 | 2023.12.14
Responding to today’s rel… 더보기

A turning point for the NZ housing market

댓글 0 | 조회 687 | 2023.12.13
A 'year of two halves' ap… 더보기

10 things to know about mortgage debt right n…

댓글 0 | 조회 1,209 | 2023.12.06
The housing loan market h… 더보기

Home values rise 0.7% in November

댓글 0 | 조회 1,164 | 2023.12.01
Hot on the heels of Octob… 더보기