The latest issue of Property Focus by
the ANZ has some interesting, if somewhat sober, commentary about the current
state of the property market. In essence they say the market has
turned, but due to a lag effect it has yet to become evident in the annual
property measures.
They say, "On a 3-month annualised basis, nationwide prices are running at 1.9%,
which is down from over 23% in mid-2016. Auckland and Christchurch prices are
actually 6.7% and 10.2% lower respectively on the same measure; even if we
account for volatility that’s an almighty thump…Nationally, house prices are
still up 10.6% on a year ago according to the stratified measures, but annual
changes lag turning points. Quarterly changes are noisier but more adept at
picking changes in the market. The signal on this front (just +0.5% 3m/3m in February)
indicates a clear slowdown."
Supporting their view is a downturn in the
number of houses being sold. They say,
"House sales have fallen in seven of the past 12 months, with
turnover down 24% since April. This weakness is broad-based. Auckland sales
volumes are down 13.6% y/y, with the February seasonally adjusted monthly sales
more than a third lower than the September-2015 peak, while ex-Auckland seasonally
adjusted sales volumes are down 12% y/y (-21% from their April-2016 monthly
peak)."
A slow down in prices and a fall in the
number of properties being sold is a clear indication that the market has
cooled. The presumption is that this flat-lining will show up in the annual
figures over the next three and six months.
The ANZ points to a number of reasons
contributing to the turnaround:
- The tighter loan-to-value ratio restrictions for investors have had a dramatic effect on investor buying. Lending to investors now account for 26% of mortgage lending, down from 38% in June 2016. That's a major turnaround and is exactly what was intended by the Reserve Bank. Clearly investors are now less active because their line of credit has been restricted.
- Banks are rationing credit. Now a larger share of new lending is on less-risky terms. Lending to those who borrow more than 70% of the property value accounted for only 13% of the total lending in February, down from 33% in July and over 50% in mid-2015. Reducing the risk to the banking sector in this way was another goal of the Reserve Bank that has been achieved.
- Interest rates are rising, not falling, and there are now clear signals that interest rates will continue to rise. That's making borrowers more cautions about trading up or getting into their first home if that involves high debt. Caution is becoming the prevailing sentiment.
The ANZ says that migration flows to and
from New Zealand continues to be the one of the major drivers of the housing
market. "The early-1970s, mid-1990s
and mid-2000s house price booms coincided with large net migration inflows…On a
three-month annualised basis, net permanent and long-term migration was close to
74,000 in February, which is near all-time highs and over 1½% of the resident
population. More arrivals and fewer departures have both contributed to this large
net inflow, although over the past 12 months or so, the former has been the
dominant factor."
They expect migration inflows to remain
strong, but there is little doubt that a reversal in the migration trend
remains the greatest risk for property investors. History shows that migrations
numbers are volatile and can change direction very quickly - particularly from
Australia.
The great advantage New Zealand has is
that it remains attractive to overseas migrants - more so post-Brexit and as
the US becomes increasingly polarised politically.
The ANZ also has some interesting
comments about home affordability:
"We estimate that for a purchaser of a median priced home (20%
deposit), the average mortgage payment to income nationally is around 34% at
the moment. However, once again there are stark regional differences, with the
average mortgage payment to income in Auckland around 51% for new purchasers. That
is on par with the highs reached in 2007 despite mortgage rates being near
historic lows currently. It highlights how sensitive some recent home-buyers in
Auckland would be to even a small lift in interest rates."
There is no question that quite a few homeowners in Auckland will be
becoming concerned that the value of their home is not rising, while interest
rates are. Market sentiment in Auckland has shifted from exuberance to caution,
and that is likely to become more obvious in the months ahead.
1 comment:
Great. The greedy might yet get the comeuppance for pushing housing prices to ridiculous levels in this country.Nothing is produced in pushing second hand house prices through the roof. It is a recipe for disaster for the economy of this land when resources are not channeled to producing something as opposed to feathers for some short sighted greedy traitors nest.
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