Australia house prices: Property market slows as people bank tax cuts

Source: LatestHat80

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  1. Australia house prices: Property market slows as people bank tax cuts
    The Reserve Bank’s aggressive interest rate settings are finally bringing the property market to heel, with new figures revealing a slowdown across the nation’s capital cities as more homes go up for sale and landlords struggle to ramp up rents.

    As analysis by the Commonwealth Bank suggests Australians are using their stage 3 tax cuts to pay down their mortgages rather than go on a spending spree, CoreLogic reported home values lifted by a “modest” 0.4 per cent in September.

    House values have either started to fall or slowed, new data shows.
    House values have either started to fall or slowed, new data shows. CREDIT: DION GEORGOPOULOS
    Through September, Sydney’s median house value lifted by just 0.1 per cent to $1.47 million, up a total of 0.3 per cent over the past three months. The annual increase stepped down from 5.7 per cent in August to 4.9 per cent last month.

    Melbourne’s median house value fell another 0.2 per cent to $925,762, to be 1.3 per cent lower over the quarter and 1.5 per cent down since the start of the year.

    House values also slipped in Hobart – by 0.2 per cent to $692,504 – and in Canberra – down 0.2 per cent to $966,684.

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    The lift in values is being driven by the nation’s mid-sized capital cities which all experienced an increase, led by a 1.6 per cent jump in Perth to $830,965. But along with Adelaide and Brisbane, the three cities are also showing signs of a slowdown in growth.

    CoreLogic’s research director Tim Lawless said the drop in value growth was being accompanied by a lift in supply. New listings were 3.2 per cent higher than a year ago and sit 8.8 per cent above their five-year average.

    “If the first month of spring is anything to go by, purchasing activity isn’t keeping pace with the flow of new listings,” he said.

    “A further rise in advertised supply is good news for buyers, but for vendors, it means more competition and the potential for a softening in selling conditions.”

    CoreLogic’s measure of rents increased by 0.1 per cent through the September quarter, the smallest change in a three-month period in four years.

    Commonwealth Bank data suggests the stage 3 tax cuts are being used to pay down debt rather than go on a shopping binge.
    Commonwealth Bank data suggests the stage 3 tax cuts are being used to pay down debt rather than go on a shopping binge. CREDIT: OSCAR COLMAN
    Rents fell by 0.5 per cent in Sydney, by 0.2 per cent in Brisbane and by 0.8 per cent in Canberra over the past three months, while they rose by 0.3 per cent in Melbourne and Perth.

    Lawless said a slowdown in net overseas migration and the large jump in rents over the past two years were now hitting the rental market.

    “Our affordability metrics indicated that the median income household would require around a third of their income to service the median rent value across Australia in June,” he said.

    “It wouldn’t be surprising if the average household size has continued to increase as group households and multi-generational households become more common in the face of high rental costs.”

    The Reserve Bank has previously raised concerns that high house values encouraged home owners to spend via the “wealth effect”.

    There have also been worries that the stage 3 tax cuts, worth $24 billion in their first year of operation, would also add to inflationary pressures.

    But data compiled by the Commonwealth Bank shows that despite its customers receiving more in income since the start of the tax cuts, there has not been a commensurate increase in spending.

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    Senior economist Stephen Wu said while there had been an uptick in spending through August, this had eased through the first three weeks of September.

    He said the extra cash going into bank accounts was being diverted into mortgage offset accounts or paying down other forms of debt.

    “The widening gap between spending and income growth naturally means ‘economic savings’ have increased,” he said.

    “Households are choosing not to consume out of the tax cuts, but are paying down their debt ahead of schedule. Flows into offset and redraw accounts over the year through to August have been rising sharply for CBA customers.”

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  2. Who’s banking any tax cuts with interest rates this high, with insurance and utilities sky-rocketing?

  3. The Herald shits itself at the slightest whiff of a drop in house prices, as if sky high house prices are somehow benefitting the country

  4. Wide-Initiative-5782 on

    “pay down debt” read: “used to pay for massively and rapidly jacked up interest rates”

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