Sunday, February 28, 2010

Homes being sold at a loss

Property analyst Residex reports that a quarter of properties sold recently that had been bought since start of 2005 fetched less than their earlier purchase price! Neutral Bay seems to have copped it worst, with a house median value of $2m selling for an average 12% less than purchase price, so the unlucky owners lost some $275,000 on the property not counting all the other expenses such as taxes, duties, and interest. And Residex CEO John Edwards forecasts the number of people losing money on their houses will increase.
Mr Edwards says a major part of the problem is poor valuations. Usually there are no very similar houses that have sold in the area recently, and valuation has to be based on experience and judgement.
Actually wise estate agents don't claim to "value" properties because they are not qualified valuers. Estate agents offer an opinion only. Legally, valuers are allowed a 15% margin of error.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Hornsby Housing Strategy - BOB Meeting

The inaugural meeting of Businesses of Beecroft (BOB) met yesterday in the Beecroft Bowling Club, with over forty people in attendance.
After introductory talks by Paul MacDonald and Robert Sawtell, Mr Michael Hutchence, Ward C Councillor, was introduced to discuss the current state of the Hornsby Shire Council's Housing Strategy document.
He explained that there is not yet an approved second version of the plan. The proposed amendments listed on the Shire website on 8 December have yet to be ratified and the Shire needs approval to publicise the new modified plan. Of course, those amendments include the incorporation of Beecroft Village into the list of precincts to be approved for 5 - storey development.
Mr Hutchence explained that there will be many other associated documents, covering such major issues as car parking and traffic. The complete strategy will be put on display in mid March, and CDs containing the entire suite of documents will be posted through the community.
Apparently the original plan was just to display the plan for a couple of weeks, but this has been extended to a full month, probably starting on 15 March.
This blog will provide updates as more information becomes available.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Buyers Beware!

The Money magazine of the Sydney Morning Herald has a powerful article about the risks of buying into property at the present time! Interest rates are rising, and lots of first home owners are already coming under mortgage stress. Of 251,000 houses purchased under the first home owner scheme in the 18 months since the government introduced it, almost 40% are experience some mortgage stress, with 30,000 of them in "severe" mortgage stress!!
Severe stress is defined as those who are behind on their repayments and are trying to sell or refinance or are being forced to foreclose.
A report by Demographia says "the median-income household would be expected to pay more than 50% of its income to service a new mortgage on a median-priced house in Sydney".
Fujitsu expects interest rates to increase 0.75% this year, which would increase the number of households reporting stress from 40% to 47%.

Australian Mortgage Funds are being closed

Commonwealth Bank's plans to close two troubled mortgage funs have sparked concerns that many other frozen funds across the sector may soon follow. Colonial First State has been hit by rising lending losses in its underlying investments, which have wiped out its ability to pay distributions of the fund. The CEO Brian Bissaker states "the logical conclusion is to give investors their money back as soon as they can while the fund is a going concern". It may take four years for investors to be fully paid out and Mr Bissaker could not guarantee that investors would get all their money back.
In a separate article in SMH Business Day, Carolyn Cummins reports that CFS Retail Property Trust and Commonwealth Property Office Fund are both confident that the worst of the global financial meltdown is behind them and that vacancy rates and shop sales will move into positive territory this year.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Housing Bubble about to Burst???

A scary article in Saturday's Sydney Morning Herald reports on the possibility that Australian house prices could collapse, under the weight of mortgage defaults! The Economist magazine recently estimated that Australian house prices are over-valued by a terrifying 50%, artificially buoyed up by confidence in the influx of immigrants and a prospering economy. But is that confidence, or blind optimism? In November 2009 it is estimated some 200,000 households were having such difficulty servicing their mortgages that they might have to sell up or have the bank foreclose.

Apparently that number is rising rapidly. Fujitsu consultants estimate that by end of this year 637,000 Australian households will be under some form or mortgage stress. Even so Fujitsu estimates house prices will rise by 10% this year.

So where is this all leading? Steve Keen, associate professor of economics and finance in UWS, forecasts this possible path:

The volume of house sales falls as buyers hold off to save the larger deposits now being demanded by the banks.

Sellers, optimistic and accustomed to higher prices, won't take what they are offered.

Housing speculators start to take losses in order to invest their money more profitably elsewhere.

House prices fall!!!

Three years ago the American housing market was booming and nobody was forecasting anything other than prices increasing endlessly. People with no hope of paying mortgages took out loans on the assurance they could sell up at a profit in a year. And look what happened. To quote the SMH, half a million Americans have just learnt their lesson in the hardest possible way. Here in Australia, all those eager first home owners bought under the Government's (reckless?) encouragement and many are now struggling to cope as interest rates rise. Where will it end?

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

New Party wants Population Debate

William Bourke is proposing a new political party to question the wisdom of the Kevin Rudd plan to increase Australia's population from 22 million to 35 million by 2050. He believes that the Prime Minster's plans are out of touch with the feelings of most voters. He is concerned that the only debate on the population issue is on how to deal with the consequences, whereas the important question is whether such growth is desirable.
This relates very closely to the recent interest in the Hornsby Shire's Housing Strategy, which proposes to build five storey residential blocks all around Hornsby Shire to accommodate all the new immigrants due to arrive here. As reported elsewhere in this blog, the residents of Beecroft and Cheltenham seem to be questioning the viability of an explosion of small appartments on what is now Beecroft Village.
An interesting comment by Dick Smith was "all governments encouraged high levels of growth because that was what big business wanted, especially property developers, who depended on an ever-increasing demand for accommodation to maximise their profits".

Bankers Now Splashing the Cash

A report in Sydney Morning Herald claims that the bonuses recently paid to bankers are driving up top end property prices. "The recovery at the top end of the market is coming from executives who are in the financial service sector, which is again producing bonuses for their higher discretionary expenditure," says John Symond of Aussie Home Loans.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

"House Prices on the Boil"

That was the headline in the Sydney Morning Herald announcing that most people now predict house prices will rise 5%. Is 5% "on the boil", while current mortgage rates exceed this and are confidently forecast to rise during this year?
The NAB has changed its forecast of house price trends from a forecast 5% drop this year to a 5% rise this year and next, based on the higher than forecast employment figures.
"The combination of lower unemployment, low interest rates, undersupply of houses and the first home owner boost acted to increase house prices and hence consumer wealth," says Alan Oster of NAB.
The SMH says "the consensus is for house price growth of between 5 and 10 percent".
Shane Oliver of AMP Capital suggests low-end house prices could fall modestly but predicts average prices rising 5%.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Interest Rates NOT RAISED

To most people's surprise and in defiance of most predictions, the Reserve Bank did NOT raise interest rates this afternoon!
In the flurry of postings explaining this the dominant reason seems to have been that business confidence was quite badly damaged by last month's rise. Obviously the Reserve Bank decided all those first home buyers now having problems with their mortgages needed a break!

House Prices - the latest

The Bureau of Statistics released figures for their capital city house price index that show Sydney house prices jumped 5% in the last quarter, 12% in the last year. However JPMorgan's Ben Jarman believes this just reflects a rush to exploit the cheap cost of borrowing before rates started going up, and the first home owner grant before it was phased out.
Housing research firm Bismak says the Bureau's measurement inflates the price rises.
It seems certain that the Reserve Bank will raise rates again today.
So, who wants to guess where house prices are really going?

Monday, February 1, 2010

Hornsby Shire Housing Strategy Update

A number of people have asked me to help them locate the updated housing strategy on the Hornsby Shire website. And indeed it is not easy to find. The original housing strategy document is still presented on the website as though it is the current document, and I can find no reference to the fact that there is a new version.
To find the latest version, you have to go through quite a complicated path. Go to https://businesspapers.hornsby.councilsonline.com.au/, and select December 2009, then select the "planning" line and click "view". Go right to the bottom of this document and you will find the amendments to the Strategy Document, including the key line "Beecroft Road - Allow 5 storey, part residential, part mixed use development."
One problem is that it doesn't seem possible to print out individual pages of the document, which is about 200 pages long.
At the very bottom are links, one of which finally opens up a new document Planning Proposal Hornsby Shire Housing Strategy Version 1 December 2009. Oddly, it starts by saying "This is the first version of the Hornsby Shire Housing Strategy Planning Proposal", which makes one wonder how it relates to the earlier and subsequently modified document.
The introduction says "After consideration of submissions, Council has resolved to amend the Strategy. The precincts proposed for rezoning for increased densities previously identified in Volume 2 of the Strategy have been amended and are now identified in the draft zoning maps attached to this proposal."
One wonders why the original and now obsolete document is still on display on the council website, and why the amended version is so hard to locate.
About one third of the way through this document you will find the map showing the area proposed for redevelopment in Beecroft - the entirety of Beecroft Village between Chapman Avenue, Beecroft Road, and Wongala Crescent, down as far as and including the fire station.

Businesses of Beecroft

A group of businesses in Beecroft Village are getting together to create a forum for Beecroft commercial issues. It is proposed to have an inaugural meeting on 23 February at 6pm in The Beecroft (Bowling) Club.
Watch this blog for more details, or contact Paul Macdonald on 0407 414 261 at The Children's Bookshop, email staff@thechildrensbookshop.com.au.
Paul will be issuing an agenda in a couple of days, one item that will be discussed is the Hornsby Shire's decision to include Beecroft Village in their latest draft of the Housing Strategy, as a candidate for 5 storey mixed commercial and residential development.

Rate Rises Spooking Buyers

AFG, Australia's largest mortgage broker, says buyers are rapidly deserting the housing market as interest rates creep up. AFG sold $1.5 billion worth of loans last month, which was the fourth consecutive fall, comparing with $2.9 billion in September 2009. That of course was the month when the Reserve Bank started the progressive raising of interest rates, which is almost certain to happen again tomorrow.