By Greg Ninness
The new loan-to-value-ratio mortgage lending restrictions on residential investment properties may have started pulling back house prices in Auckland, but do not appear to be having any effect in the rest of the country where prices are continuing to rise strongly, according to interest.co.nz's regional Home Loan Affordability Reports for September.
The new mortgage lending restrictions introduced by the Reserve Bank officially kicked in on October 1, but most of the main banks had already been introducing them over the previous couple of months.
That has produced a small respite for first home buyers in Auckland, where the lower quartile selling price dropped from its all time high of $695,600 in August to $682,100 in September.
The lower quartile selling price is important for first home buyers and investors because it is the price point that 25% of sales would be below, making it a proxy for the market segment where first home buyers and investors are most active.
The Home Loan Affordability Report for Auckland estimates that the small drop in the lower quartile price combined with a minuscule fall in the average two year fixed mortgage rate would have reduced mortgage interest payments faced by a typical first home buying couple in Auckland by $16 a week to $705.60.
That would still have taken up 44.5% of a typical Auckland first home buying couple's take home pay, assuming they both worked full time and earned the median wage for 25-29 year olds.
The only other region where affordability improved in September was Southland, where the lower quartile price dropped from 157,900 in August to $153,700, still well below the high of $165,300 achieved in February.
However lower quartile prices continued to increase strongly in all other regions in September, setting new record highs in Northland, Waikato/Bay of Plenty, Hawkes Bay, Taranaki, Wellington, Nelson/Marlborough, Canterbury, Central Otago-Lakes and Otago.
That means affordability in these regions is continuing to worsen for first home buyers but overall still remains within affordable levels, with mortgage payments on a lower quartile priced home taking up less than 40% of a typical first home buying couple's pay in each region.
Some of the strongest growth in the lower quartile price has occurred in Wellington, where it jumped from $361,800 in August to $392,500 in September.
That had a significant impact on affordability, with the mortgage payments on a lower quartile priced home estimated to take up 22.8% of a typical first home buying couple's pay, up from 20.79% in August.
The trends evident in the Home Loan Affordability report are consistent with patterns seen in interest.co.nz's auction sales reports over the last few weeks, with investment apartments in Auckland becoming more difficult to sell.
That suggests investors may may be struggling to purchase investment properties in Auckland because of the requirement to provide 40% equity, and are instead looking for cheaper properties in the provinces, pushing up prices accordingly.
Many investors have also been buying for capital gains rather than the income stream residential properties can provide and may be avoiding the Auckland market if they feel the quick capital gains in the region may be slowing or coming to an end.
That's potentially good news for struggling first home buyers, who may start facing less competition from investors for lower priced properties.
However, one month's set of of sales figures do not make a trend and the market is just at the very start of the summer selling season.
It is too soon to say whether the small drop in Auckland's lower quartile prices was the start of decline or the beginning of a flattening or even a small blip before they start heading back up again.
We will need at least another two months of sales for a trend to be evident.
35 Comments
Don't do it Simon, Palmy is the suicide capital of the world (http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/health/5518442/Palmerston-North-high-in…).
Given that you post on nearly every article with nothing but Palmy-spruiking bluster, you sound far more like a person "talking their book" than anyone genuinely confident about the fundamentals of their argument.... almost like you're trying to convince yourself....
Stalling prices in Auckland and rising prices elsewhere is good news. As per your map, houses are still very affordable in the regions. Let's not forget that whilst the regions near Auckland have appreciated strongly in the last 12 months, they have been stagnant for years. Some regions further from Auckland are only just starting to appreciate slightly and that's a good thing
All of the regional reports track affordability for three types of households. First Home buyers is one, and the "second rungers" are an older couple moving up the property ladder to buy their next home. If you follow any of the links in the article it will take you through to the full reports where you will be able to read all 3 profiles.
The herd mentality has taken over the market .
Just wait until this housing boom goes pop , as it inevitably will ........... and the longer it takes the bigger the POP
The thing that will ensure a landing, is the slowdown in immigration between now and 2018 resulting in demand tapering off .
In the meantime everyone is borrowing their unearned equity ( my equity is supposedly 4 times what we paid for the house and is more than what we have earned from wages, interest and dividends combined over the past 7 years ) .
And its all tax free
How crazy is that ?
This market is surreal and out out touch with reality , and borrowing against this illusion of wealth is dangerous
The meat in the Sandwich is businesses, as every man and his dog, puts all their dosh into houses, not their mouths.
The markets cannot all be wrong,... can they?
They cannot be all vegans, arriving down from Awkland...to Tauranga and all points..North, South, East and West.....and all points.............in between......can they?.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/85747538/Mad-Butcher-Tauranga-in-liquid…
Not the first, nor the last...in this Mad, Mad, World of ours, where we put all our money on the house, not the table.
There is a huge exodus of young families leaving Auckland at the moment I believe. Anecdotal evidence only at this stage but when you know several people doing it and keep hearing of others you know it's a trend. Will be interesting to see the numbers if anyone does research into domestic migration....?
Auckland is a "province" or "region". Wellington is the Capital city, the rest of New Zealand is "the regions". Rising prices here are stupid, but not enough to prevent my daughter in Auckland leaving her nursing job now she has finished her Masters. Grade average 8.5, can't be bothered with high cost of housing and travel and culturally inappropriate immigrants. Auckland's loss, Wellington's gain.
I am one of those statistics. I will be moving my young family to Chch in the new year. I have a specialised international skillset that would be of more benefit to NZ if I worked for a larger company in Auckland. I am paid handsomely for my work in Auckland but even on this (plus my wife's above average income) there is no desirable avenue to home ownership.
The choice is stay in Auckland and buy in a bad area with average schooling far from town, work just to pay the mortgage and don't see much of the kids due to the commute or move, build a house to our own specifications in a good school area, have much more disposable income and a 10 minute commute. My projections also say that retirement will occur at 50 vs never in Auckland.
It is amazing how a change in buying power (people can't afford to buy and live in Auckland so they leave to the regions) and investors buying power is reduced (now thy need to have more deposit) and what happens....the number of property listings goes up from 1300 to 2000 in 2 months time.
Ban non resident buyers, tax multiple investment rental properties and the housing crisis will be gone in no time!
We are in trouble when the lower quartile selling price of 700k is 14 times Auckland's median wage of 50k.
"That has produced a small respite for first home buyers in Auckland, where the lower quartile selling price dropped from its all time high of $695,600 in August to $682,100 in September."
Hardly a pull back at a 0.02% drop..... haha
"That's potentially good news for struggling first home buyers, who may start facing less competition from investors for lower priced properties."
The only way you can objectively see what is happening is if you display the % of buyers FHB versus Investors for the lower quartile homes.
This article seems to be MSM trying to talk down Auckland Property before the "Loan to Income tool " is announced.
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