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Australia:House prices set to rise in 2010.

Ash007

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Gratz to all the forummners that have properties in Ozzieland. You guys will be seeing property prices increase again. :D:D:D:D:D:D

http://www.smh.com.au/business/house-prices-set-to-rise-in-2010-20091221-l9pb.html?autostart=1

As prospective home buyers look for the best time to jump into the market, many of the nation’s top housing analysts have forecast modest residential price growth of about 5 or 6 per cent in 2010.

Some of Australia’s leading economists believe demand for homes will stay strong as investors and upgraders pick up the slack from first home buyers.

But a small group of doomsayers is convinced a combination of rising interest rates, the winding up of the first home owners grant boost and over-inflated prices could lay the foundations for a crash.

Happily, the nation is emerging from the global financial crisis with strong population growth, the lowest interest rates in decades and a rosier jobs outlook.

Most economists, industry heads and real estate agents see the sun continuing to shine on residential property next year.

BIS Shrapnel senior project manager of residential property Angie Zigomanis predicts steady growth of about five to six per cent in established residential property next year.

‘‘I’d expect you’d see steady low-to-mid single digit growth next year,’’ Mr Zigomanis said. ‘‘Over the next two or three years I think you’ll find interest rates will keep slowly edging upwards and it’ll keep a lid on the massive double digit price growth we were seeing previously.’’

Annual established house prices in Australia grew 6.2 per cent to September 2009, the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data show.

‘‘If you look at most markets, prices declined last year and while people are talking about booms and everything else, most of what it did was really put prices back to where they were 12 to 18 months ago,’’ Mr Zigomanis said.

First home buyers would not be excluded from the market until the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raised interest rates by another 1 or 2 per cent, he said.

Investor demand and upgrader’s demand picked up in the last few months of 2009 and would continue well into next year.

As city rents increased due to low vacancy rates, more first home buyers in the 25 to 35 year age group would be encouraged into the market.

Housing Industry Association chief economist Harley Dale said Australia would experience significant 20 to 25 per cent growth in new housing stock through to mid 2011.

He also supports predictions of about five to six per cent growth in established homes next year.

‘‘With prices, we’ll probably continue to get a little bit more growth over the next six to 12 months but probably not at the rate that we’ve seen over the last six months which has been driven a lot by the first home-owner base,’’ he said.

Mum and dad investors, who tended to look at the same type of investment housing stock as first home buyers, were beginning to step in to fill the gap.

A shortage of housing, low interest rates and the first home buyer’s grant had helped support prices, he said.But University of Western Sydney Associate Professor of economics and finance Steve Keen said the rates and grants combination had already helped cause a housing boom in 2009.

‘‘The fact that rates are rising as we enter 2010, combined with the ending of the boost and the winding back of government stimulus packages, means that rising interest rates are likely to end the (housing) bubble that began in 2009,’’ Mr Keen said.

The implications would be ‘‘substantially negative’’ for all properties, not just those valued under $500,000.‘‘I’d expect a five per cent or so fall (in residential house prices), probably returning to somewhere between the current peak and the previous one in September 2008.’’

Meanwhile Commonwealth Bank economist James McIntyre cites wages growth as a key part of the equation, while predicting significant skills shortages emerging within 12 to 18 months.

He said house prices would grow in the ‘‘mid single digits’’ next year, but those increases depended on how the build up of wages translated to other sectors of the economy.

‘‘If the whole economy catches fire with a strong growth in wages, then that will really be supportive of a continued strong growth in house prices.’’

He dismissed suggestions the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) had waited too long to increase interest rates and said there was a very low chance of house prices falling.

It would take a ‘‘significant global shock’’ and an unprecedented surge in building approvals of between 200,000 and 250,000 homes to see significant weakness in house prices, he said.

Ray White Real Estate chairman Brian White believes Australia has avoided a dramatic downturn in house prices.

‘‘All of us seem to have forgotten the anguish of the first four or five months of the year and we’re trying to understand just how on earth the year finished so strongly,’’ Mr White, who heads the nation’s largest group of real estate agencies, said.

He also forecast growth of about 5 per cent in 2010 and said it had become a vendor’s market.

‘‘Now we’re going into the new year with a number of interest rate increases occurring but with quite strong growth.’’

AAP
 
Gratz to all the forummners that have properties in Ozzieland. You guys will be seeing property prices increase again. :D:D:D:D:D:D

http://www.smh.com.au/business/house-prices-set-to-rise-in-2010-20091221-l9pb.html?autostart=1

As prospective home buyers look for the best time to jump into the market, many of the nation’s top housing analysts have forecast modest residential price growth of about 5 or 6 per cent in 2010.

AAP

A bank report predicted the dwelling growth to be 8% avg.. Good area is expected to much more ! The general rule ~ property growth will always be better than the term deposit offered by the bank.. due the risks..

For those who have more than 2hses.. they can start laughing now :)
 
A bank report predicted the dwelling growth to be 8% avg.. Good area is expected to much more ! The general rule ~ property growth will always be better than the term deposit offered by the bank.. due the risks..

For those who have more than 2hses.. they can start laughing now :)

I sense a bubble is coming...... why spend so much on Aussie houses when u can buy a few in the US which now falls below the pre-80s pricing.
 
I sense a bubble is coming...... why spend so much on Aussie houses when u can buy a few in the US which now falls below the pre-80s pricing.

Are you kidding. Bubble ? You have no idea what is coming next.. in the next few months, there will be heaps of jobs.. what would happen when these ppl collect their paychecks ? They will start buying.. suppliers will gain :)

Of course, there will be money made at every corner.. if you have a few million extra cash, it aint bad to spend a few pennies in US.. As for now, I suggest we shld all look into our backyard and start planting the seeds and wait for harvest time :)
 
I sense a bubble is coming...... why spend so much on Aussie houses when u can buy a few in the US which now falls below the pre-80s pricing.

Those lower-priced US houses need not exactly be cheap or bubble-free.

A number of excellent properties in the US were purchased using stock option money or bubble wealth which have since evaporated.

So, the lower prices are a correction of the post GFC situation. This is by no means that the US wealth bubble factory is lost. No, it is still very much alive and still run by Ben Bernanke. He is the brain behind Fed policies during Alan Greenspan's days as well.
 
I think you are right, US problems are not over yet. Its just in a lulled now, I can't remember which documentary it was, but basically Ben Bernanke was a student of Alan Greenspan. After the GFC, Greenspan actually came out and apologised that his deregulation of the market was too aggressive and this cause the GFC.

Having said that, I'm not an expert in housing in Australia, I see two arguments being pushed forward here. The sceptics says that house prices are just not sustainable in Australia, its a big ponzi scheme. While the bubble pusher always says that due to several factors, lower interest rate, low unemployment, low building approval, immigration etc etc that house prices would continue to grow. Whoever you believe it in remember to treat it like all investment class. Know when to let go and only buy if you have a backup plan. I'm not saying you should be risk adverse, but a bit more time in studying and formalizing your plan would be better then rushing in head on.

PS: I plan to get a house eventually, but I can't afford it now. Maybe when I get my CPF out next year I would have enough for a deposit. :D For now its getting all the white goods ready and maybe a Rolex. :D

Those lower-priced US houses need not exactly be cheap or bubble-free.

A number of excellent properties in the US were purchased using stock option money or bubble wealth which have since evaporated.

So, the lower prices are a correction of the post GFC situation. This is by no means that the US wealth bubble factory is lost. No, it is still very much alive and still run by Ben Bernanke. He is the brain behind Fed policies during Alan Greenspan's days as well.
 
Are you kidding. Bubble ? You have no idea what is coming next.. in the next few months, there will be heaps of jobs.. what would happen when these ppl collect their paychecks ? They will start buying.. suppliers will gain :)

really? i heard many SMEs are struggling, thus many are keen to go back to the workforce, I come across candidates out of jobs for months especially in the financial industry. What goes up will come down eventually, certainly we don't want to see a subprime in our backyard. Oz's properties now are seriously overpriced and many will stuck with unpaid high mortgages and once china runs out of steam the resource demand will decline, already a slowdown china is predicted as soon as 2010. Look at what happened to UAE now, many big infra projects are canned or put on hold.

Of course, there will be money made at every corner.. if you have a few million extra cash, it aint bad to spend a few pennies in US.. As for now, I suggest we shld all look into our backyard and start planting the seeds and wait for harvest time :)

The situation in US certainly makes Australia looks very expensive from property investment perspective, most investors are the chinese and they are not stupid making comparison both. Australia's advantage is the rich resources and strong regulated financial system (but taxing on the people on the ground) but US is still the world's innovation and product development centre ; they are still getting the brighest talents and things there now are too cheap to ignore.

Anyway good luck in your investment.
 
The situation in US certainly makes Australia looks very expensive from property investment perspective, most investors are the chinese and they are not stupid making comparison both. Australia's advantage is the rich resources and strong regulated financial system (but taxing on the people on the ground) but US is still the world's innovation and product development centre ; they are still getting the brighest talents and things there now are too cheap to ignore.

Anyway good luck in your investment.

I hate to say this.. I am within the industry, hence have some knowledge on the "supply & demand".. plus the technical knowledge:D Refer to property articles, in a normal circle (if economy is fairly good) the property prices will boom for 7-10yrs.. The sub-prime crisis (few mths back) was unable to cause a big correction, then.. when the economy picks up, the ppty prices likely to go north!

"Cheap" does not always means a good buy... you have to look hard at the demand & supply.. factors affecting the market. Govt's subsidy to affordable housing will dampen the supply further..

I have tripled my investments when I arrived in Australia, inevitably my debts are 3x too.. Investment will have higher risks but higher returns.. term deposit savings is risks free but cant beat the inflation.. There is no right or wrong answer..
 
I think you are right, US problems are not over yet. Its just in a lulled now, I can't remember which documentary it was, but basically Ben Bernanke was a student of Alan Greenspan. After the GFC, Greenspan actually came out and apologised that his deregulation of the market was too aggressive and this cause the GFC.

Having said that, I'm not an expert in housing in Australia, I see two arguments being pushed forward here. The sceptics says that house prices are just not sustainable in Australia, its a big ponzi scheme. While the bubble pusher always says that due to several factors, lower interest rate, low unemployment, low building approval, immigration etc etc that house prices would continue to grow. Whoever you believe it in remember to treat it like all investment class. Know when to let go and only buy if you have a backup plan. I'm not saying you should be risk adverse, but a bit more time in studying and formalizing your plan would be better then rushing in head on.

PS: I plan to get a house eventually, but I can't afford it now. Maybe when I get my CPF out next year I would have enough for a deposit. :D For now its getting all the white goods ready and maybe a Rolex. :D

Really? that is news to me, countless fund managers, and Billions of US$ in market liquidity. Here were are buying US$ as a hedge against the overvalued Euro and the fiscal issues in Ireland and Greece. But what do we know, we only manage most of the worlds money supply!

You might wish to give Bernake a tinkle and let him know there is no need to withdraw all the stimulus liquidity! People like you are the reason why there is such a thing as "margin call"!!!

The only thing I am sure of is Australia is the last place anyone should be migrating to or purchasing a property in - unless you are sadomasochistic
 
I think you are right, US problems are not over yet. Its just in a lulled now, I can't remember which documentary it was, but basically Ben Bernanke was a student of Alan Greenspan. After the GFC, Greenspan actually came out and apologised that his deregulation of the market was too aggressive and this cause the GFC.

A slight correction. Ben Bernanke the Helicopter is the prime mover of the low interest rate thingy after 9/11. Greenspan, the Chairman, rubbered stamp his approval.

The US Fed mainly uses the interest rate as a crude mechanism to handle the monetary policies, employment policies, etc. In the first place, I wonder why is central banker given the task of managing unemployment, when it's plate is full just taking care of inflation.


Having said that, I'm not an expert in housing in Australia, I see two arguments being pushed forward here. The sceptics says that house prices are just not sustainable in Australia, its a big ponzi scheme. While the bubble pusher always says that due to several factors, lower interest rate, low unemployment, low building approval, immigration etc etc that house prices would continue to grow. Whoever you believe it in remember to treat it like all investment class. Know when to let go and only buy if you have a backup plan. I'm not saying you should be risk adverse, but a bit more time in studying and formalizing your plan would be better then rushing in head on.

Nobody know which direction the property price is heading?
But the fall in rentals in WA means property prices here may be overpriced (for valuers who use rent price to gauge selling price)

The bankers are also concerned about lending too much to property buyers. The Aussie mortgage industry has more sense than the US cowboys.

If you want to borrow >80% of the market price, you have to stay in your job for at least 12 months and prove that you are able to save.



PS: I plan to get a house eventually, but I can't afford it now. Maybe when I get my CPF out next year I would have enough for a deposit. :D For now its getting all the white goods ready and maybe a Rolex. :D
 
You might wish to give Bernake a tinkle and let him know there is no need to withdraw all the stimulus liquidity! People like you are the reason why there is such a thing as "margin call"!!!

The day US Fed raise interest rate will be the day I believe the green shoots are sprouting.

It may not be long, since container volume in N America has return to its heydays. haha
 
The day US Fed raise interest rate will be the day I believe the green shoots are sprouting.

It may not be long, since container volume in N America has return to its heydays. haha

Quite a silly thing to suggest. Car ownership and the type of consumerism seen in yesteryear are long gone. The US Consumer is half broken but the economy can still grow more than 3% a year. Inflation wont be a problem but seeing some signs of concern so rates will be going up in 2010 in the USA.

One thing is for certain:migration to the US is just going to get more attractive, especially IF and only IF in 12 hours from now we see the health bill pass. Free health care, low prices, huge houses -its just the best in the world and nothing can come close.

And another thing who is more broke than the USA?

Hint Hint (Japan) Hint Hint (the UK) Hint Hint (Greece) Hint Hint (Ireland)

Get some semblance of reality for god's sake. Even our good friends over at GS have covered their dollar shorts so that should tell you everything there is to know.
 
1) The last housing swing upwards was 22 years ago somewhere in 1987 and it shot up by 56% within 18 mths. After which it collapsed. It took nearly 10 years to recover to the pre 87 levels. For the last 20 years it has appreciated steadily averaging close to 8% per year in nominal terms and 2%in real terms (after discounting inflation). With a slow and steady rise over 20years, a bubble is most unlikely unless the economy faces a structural issue. There is none in sight.

2) During the last 20 years, only one market, Melbourne was impacted and it was confined to off the plan apartments. It was due to Henry Kaye, the spruiker and other copycats. It did not impact other residential sectors. Both Sydney and Melbourne had a bit of a slowdown in growth late last year but not negative and understandly so due to GFC.

Many people have no clue what a bubble is but they tend to pray for it. Just as there are people who pray for growth with no idea what constitutes growth.

Both the US and UK property markets are undervalued and are excellent buys. Their correlation to the OZ property however is close to zero. Gold and US dollar share an inverse correlation because they are considered alternate safe havens while OZ and Canadian countries are positively correlated due to the fact that they are both commodity currency. There is no basis to correlate the US and OZ property markets by itself.

In a nutshell, its a steady rising market for 20 years, so go ahead and buy that house. Those who bought houses prior to 1987 and those who bought after Dec 1989 are sitting on a personal fortune.



Having said that, I'm not an expert in housing in Australia, I see two arguments being pushed forward here. The sceptics says that house prices are just not sustainable in Australia, its a big ponzi scheme.

PS: I plan to get a house eventually, but I can't afford it now. Maybe when I get my CPF out next year I would have enough for a deposit. :D For now its getting all the white goods ready and maybe a Rolex. :D
 
What $525,000 can buy you in Melbourne
MARIKA DOBBIN
December 19, 2009
A MELBOURNE house costs at least $100,000 more than it did a year ago.

The population boom and housing shortage pushed the median price to $525,000 in October, compared with $415,000 last October. The median is the middle value when all sale prices are listed from lowest to highest.

Apartment and unit prices grew more slowly, with a $429,250 median in October, up from $361,000 the previous October.

Price growth for houses- as well as units and apartments - has been greatest in Melbourne's middle band of suburbs 10-20 kilometres from the CBD.

And the Real Estate Institute of Victoria predicts the November median will be up to 10 per cent higher again once the remaining private sales are calculated.

Property adviser Monique Wakelin says the $525,000 median would have bought a modest house in the inner suburbs just two years ago but not any more, except for a few rare cases in the inner west.

''If you did manage to find a house for that money in the inner city, odds are that it will need major structural work and a lot of extra capital spent on it,'' she said. ''You are really looking at an apartment on that budget.''

The median price would buy more in the middle suburbs, with an unrenovated, three-bedroom brick veneer house that was built in the 1970s or later typical for that price, she said.

''It would be fairly generic looking and on a crowded road or with substandard access to public transport.''

Mark Armstrong of Property Planning Australia said buyers could still get a substantial house in the outer suburbs for $525,000.

''You'll get that 1980s McMansion-style real estate in places like Knox City and as you push further out to places like Pakenham, Caroline Springs and Tarneit you'll get a large family home that could be brand new,''

he said.

Melbourne has been the epicentre of Australia's housing-led economic recovery, with price growth outstripping that in other capitals.

Victoria has also led a national rebound in new home building, claiming a third of all new houses, units and apartments this year, according to the Australia Bureau of Statistics this week.

The buildings have overwhelmingly been low-density, detached housing along the main growth corridors and in key regional centres.

It has been driven by State Government spending on new

road and rail infrastructure, such as the $4.3 billion Regional Rail express project to Geelong,

Ballarat and Bendigo, and first home buyer incentives of up to $36,500 that favour building in regional areas.

Work on new Melbourne apartment projects has also gained steam as developers, who are keen to cash in on heated demand, become increasingly able to satisfy the steep conditions banks placed on loans following the credit crunch.

Experts predict Victoria's booming housing sector, which is the envy of the developed world, will gain even more strength next year as prosperity returns and record population growth continues.

The ANZ Bank forecast last week that rising interest rates and the phased removal of the first home buyer's grants in 2010 would slow price growth and test the market's resilience.

But it said the housing shortage that had underpinned prices would worsen dramatically unless governments acted to ease the roadblocks for residential building, including high costs, lack of skilled labour and public resistance to infill development.

''Australia will face an intractable shortage of housing that will drive a deterioration in affordability beyond anything we have ever seen,'' its Australian Property Outlook report said.
 
What $525,000 can buy you in Melbourne
MARIKA DOBBIN
December 19, 2009
A MELBOURNE house costs at least $100,000 more than it did a year ago.

The population boom and housing shortage pushed the median price to $525,000 in October, compared with $415,000 last October. The median is the middle value when all sale prices are listed from lowest to highest.

Apartment and unit prices grew more slowly, with a $429,250 median in October, up from $361,000 the previous October.

Price growth for houses- as well as units and apartments - has been greatest in Melbourne's middle band of suburbs 10-20 kilometres from the CBD.

And the Real Estate Institute of Victoria predicts the November median will be up to 10 per cent higher again once the remaining private sales are calculated.

Property adviser Monique Wakelin says the $525,000 median would have bought a modest house in the inner suburbs just two years ago but not any more, except for a few rare cases in the inner west.

''If you did manage to find a house for that money in the inner city, odds are that it will need major structural work and a lot of extra capital spent on it,'' she said. ''You are really looking at an apartment on that budget.''

The median price would buy more in the middle suburbs, with an unrenovated, three-bedroom brick veneer house that was built in the 1970s or later typical for that price, she said.

''It would be fairly generic looking and on a crowded road or with substandard access to public transport.''

Mark Armstrong of Property Planning Australia said buyers could still get a substantial house in the outer suburbs for $525,000.

''You'll get that 1980s McMansion-style real estate in places like Knox City and as you push further out to places like Pakenham, Caroline Springs and Tarneit you'll get a large family home that could be brand new,''

he said.

Melbourne has been the epicentre of Australia's housing-led economic recovery, with price growth outstripping that in other capitals.

Victoria has also led a national rebound in new home building, claiming a third of all new houses, units and apartments this year, according to the Australia Bureau of Statistics this week.

The buildings have overwhelmingly been low-density, detached housing along the main growth corridors and in key regional centres.

It has been driven by State Government spending on new

road and rail infrastructure, such as the $4.3 billion Regional Rail express project to Geelong,

Ballarat and Bendigo, and first home buyer incentives of up to $36,500 that favour building in regional areas.

Work on new Melbourne apartment projects has also gained steam as developers, who are keen to cash in on heated demand, become increasingly able to satisfy the steep conditions banks placed on loans following the credit crunch.

Experts predict Victoria's booming housing sector, which is the envy of the developed world, will gain even more strength next year as prosperity returns and record population growth continues.

The ANZ Bank forecast last week that rising interest rates and the phased removal of the first home buyer's grants in 2010 would slow price growth and test the market's resilience.

But it said the housing shortage that had underpinned prices would worsen dramatically unless governments acted to ease the roadblocks for residential building, including high costs, lack of skilled labour and public resistance to infill development.

''Australia will face an intractable shortage of housing that will drive a deterioration in affordability beyond anything we have ever seen,'' its Australian Property Outlook report said.

Well its like people have no choice but to pay such high prices if they want to live there, just like in Singapore. Funny how Australia and Singapore sound so similar
 
Well its like people have no choice but to pay such high prices if they want to live there, just like in Singapore. Funny how Australia and Singapore sound so similar

The only diff is.. most ppl in SG are on transit or employment only.. when no jobs, no benefits & NS liability, you wont see anyone hanging around..

In Australia, the employees are residents and they will be living there for a long time..

So both are generating jobs, both have booming economy, which do you think will be sustainable ?
 
One thing is for certain:migration to the US is just going to get more attractive, especially IF and only IF in 12 hours from now we see the health bill pass. Free health care, low prices, huge houses -its just the best in the world and nothing can come close.

:confused::confused::confused: I thought you were against ObamaCare ? What happen to the socialism is bad, and that it would raise your private health insurance etc etc argument? You are now for socialised medicine now? Weird how ones position can change over time when the inevitable happens.
 
:confused::confused::confused: I thought you were against ObamaCare ? What happen to the socialism is bad, and that it would raise your private health insurance etc etc argument? You are now for socialised medicine now? Weird how ones position can change over time when the inevitable happens.

Merry Xmas everyone.

Who do not want free public healthcare?
Ever since the Brits introduced theirs, Americans found a loophole and were flying over the Atlantic in hordes, for free baby deliveries in NHS hospitals.

Now, there is ever more reason for free basic public healthcare. How many millions of Americans are having human swine flu. This flu will hit anyone as in a pandemic. It is no point having just the rich taking the vaccine and not the unaffordable poor, when both classes of people will come into contact.

It is for the greater social good that if everyone is covered with public basic healthcare.

Redbull/Aussie Prick should be happy that USA has caught up with Canada/UK/Australia/NZ when it comes to managing pandemic.
 
What $525,000 can buy you in Melbourne
MARIKA DOBBIN
December 19, 2009

Housing prices soar 17% to record
PETER MARTIN
January 1, 2010
http://www.theage.com.au/business/housing-prices-soar-17-to-record-20091231-lky9.html

MELBOURNE house prices soared by 17 per cent in the first 11 months of 2009, outstripping growth in all other capital cities, new figures show.

The latest RP Data index, compiled from Valuer-General's figures, indicates the Melbourne median house price hit a new record of about $580,000 in November.

The news came as the Australian sharemarket closed at its highest level for the year. The S&P/ASX 200 index finished yesterday at 4870.6, up 31 per cent for the year and 55 per cent from its trough.

Melbourne's 17 per cent house price jump eclipsed Darwin's 15 per cent, Hobart's 14 per cent and Sydney's 12 per cent. And the rise more than offset the 5 per cent slide in Melbourne prices that followed the global financial crisis.

Melbourne's median apartment price increased even more strongly, up 19 per cent to $440,000.

RP Data cautioned that the November figures were preliminary and based on incomplete sales data. However, the inclusion of further sales figures would be unlikely to alter the strong upward trend.

CommSec economist Craig James said immigration was a key driver of prices, with Victoria receiving more than its proportional share.

"With population growing at the fastest rate in 40 years boosting demand for homes, state and federal governments need to be focused on ways to get more homes built," Mr James said.

"Barriers to housing investment need to be removed, and scrutiny needs to be applied to lifting land production and revising zoning laws."

House prices continued to rise in October and November despite successive interest rate rises in those months and the winding back of first home buyer grants.

"First home buyers have been trending down since peaking in May," said RP Data research director Tim Lawless.

"But the gap is being filled by upgraders and investors who are much less sensitive."

Credit figures released yesterday showed borrowing for housing up a further 0.7 per cent in November and up 8 per cent over the year.

Mr James said the resilience of the housing market increased the chance of a further interest rate rise when the Reserve Bank board next meets in February.

"The main worry is that home prices are rising at unsustainable rates in some capital cities such as Darwin, Hobart and Melbourne," he said. "The last thing anyone wants to see in 2010 is another boom-bust scenario."

Mr Lawless said he expected more modest house price growth in 2010 after an "exceptional and surprising" 2009. "We would expect conditions to moderate into 2010 as interest rates continue to move back to a neutral setting and the remainder of the stimulus is rolled back," he said.

"But the primary driver of growth will continue to be an under-supply of housing coupled with extraordinary demand fuelled by population growth."

Yesterday's sharemarket peak of 4870.6 is still a long way from the pre-financial crisis high of 6851. And there is little joy for investors in The Age's half-yearly economic survey to be published tomorrow, with economists predicting a rise of just 5.4 per cent in share prices this year.
------------------------------------------
For a million dollar hse, it would translate to a growth of $xxx,xxxx. Hmmmm... If economy grows further, I can retire in SG liao...

Thank you, Melbourne & SG :)
 
Last edited:
Housing prices soar 17% to record
PETER MARTIN
January 1, 2010
http://www.theage.com.au/business/housing-prices-soar-17-to-record-20091231-lky9.html

MELBOURNE house prices soared by 17 per cent in the first 11 months of 2009, outstripping growth in all other capital cities, new figures show.

Another good news coming up !

Property boom: which suburbs will surge in 2010?
MARISSA CALLIGEROS
December 31, 2009 Comments 7
Brisbane's inner-city will attract investors and up-graders staging a strong comeback in the property market in 2010, according to experts.

Property analyst Terry Ryder said suburbs within five kilometres of Brisbane's CBD would blossom in 2010, with new infrastructure developments like the Clem7 and the Northern Busway.

He said the Clem7 would help prospects in the emerging urban renewal precincts around Bowen Hills and Newstead.

And urban renewal projects, which Mr Ryder described as one of the great successes of Brisbane's real estate market, would generate a hive of activity in the new year.

"Woolloongabba is a suburb waiting to be discovered. It's awaiting a gentrification period, much like Bowen Hills on the northside. Both suburbs have a mix of public facilities, and industrial and residential areas close to the city," he said.

"Woolloongabba has got a lot of potential with Queenslander cottages so close to the city, the busway and soon the Clem7 Tunnel."

The suburbs expected to be next year's best performers have not differed greatly from 2009, as buyers expected to hunt in Albion, Lutwyche and Wooloowin for well-built apartments, most of which are priced below $350,000.

"These suburbs will benefit from the Northern Busway, the Clem7 tunnel and the duplication of the Gateway Bridge which will be completed in 2010," Mr Ryder said.

"Activity was focused on the lower-end of the market in 2009, but 2010 will be more about the middle- market, with people buying their second, third, or fourth home, and a return of investors."

The outcomes of the Henry Tax Review, handed to the Federal Government just before Christmas, would also encourage more people to invest in property, Real Estate Institute of Queensland CEO Dan Molloy said.

"Next year will be the year of investors," Mr Molloy said. "We can look forward to a steady market state, with opportunities for both buyers and sellers."

First home-buyers

Mr Molloy said activity among first home-buyers would slip slightly, but warned their presence in the market should not be discounted.

"Providing first home-buyers are doing their budgets and factoring in butter for increases in interest rates, we would still expect to see them account for their historical average of 20 per cent of buyers in the market," he said.

First home-buyers may be edged out of the inner-city market, but Mr Ryder said investor and first home-buyer bargain-hunters should look towards the burgeoning Ipswich corridor.

He said further interest rate rises in the new year would do little to hamper a recovery in the Brisbane market, although investors would jump back on the buyer band-wagon in the March quarter as the property rally raised fears of an interest rate hike.

The QBE Lenders Mortgage Insurance Housing Outlook released earlier this year predicted Brisbane would have a shortage of 33,000 new dwellings by June next year.

Although the housing squeeze may not have a marked effect on house prices, with the median house price expected to increase just one per cent to $425,000.

But QBE LMI forecasted median house prices would rise 15 per cent by 2012.

Toowong: "epicentre" of Brisbane property

Mr Ryder suggested Toowong would soon emerge as the "epicentre" of Brisbane's future property market, with Brisbane City Council's proposed Northern Link tunnel and the State Government's hopes for a Western Bypass Tunnel, from Toowong to Everton Park.

He said a decrease in prices from 10 and 15 per cent in the past year was no reason to shy away from the inner-west suburb.

"Toowong currently presents strong buying opportunities because prices fell in 2009, but the long-term growth record - and the long-term prospects - of the area are good," Mr Ryder said.

Houses would be priced below $650,000, while apartments would remain about $310,000. he said.

"Toowong has very solid credentials: the dwelling mix is about 50/50 between houses and apartments; the area has a young demographic; and there's plenty of rental demand because the university is close by," Mr Ryder said.

He said the Western Suburbs Transport Strategy would buoy demand for property in the suburb.

"Completion of two tunnel projects will give Toowong residents vastly improved road links to the north and north-east, while the proposed rail upgrade will improve transport links to the CBD.

"This will be a hot-spot of the future."

Source: brisbanetimes.com.au
 
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