The asking price means absolutely nothing. The only price that counts is the market price, ie the price that a buyer is willing to pay at that moment in time.
over estimate or under estimate ..?
www.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-11/up-to-1-million-households-may-go-into-mortgage-default-by-sept/9976268?section=business
If only we all had a pair of those rose coloured glasses Formula.
Unfortunately, the property market is so over-inflated that the only way to correct it will mean that many people will lose out big time. It's the last thing we want, but it may well end up out of control if the negative vibe sets in and panic takes control, or a if a financial crisis triggers the inevitable defaults.
The fundamental issue is that the current prices don't represent the real value of property. They represent pure speculation and demand. Historically, these bubbles have always corrected. To believe it won't happen again is foolish. Only in property or risky stock market products are such levels of price inflation viewed as acceptable.
That's why the current situation is utterly unsustainable.
You're right, correction usually takes place but in this instance is the situation not being exacerbated by foreign buying?
Are there any reliable statistics which show the quantity of property owned by non Australians?
I don't follow it much but the scuttlebutt I do hear says that the prices are elevated because of this. F^cking typical of our politicians to create a situation where Aussies can not afford to buy and are forced rent from foreigners!
The government does review all foreign real estate investments but generally takes the flawed view of investment increasing the supply of housing to reduce pricing.
You are correct Japie, the plan might work if all investment was limited to new houses, but as we can see with negative gearing it just introduces more buyers/demand and so the price increases accordingly. The rules need to be tightened up, but if they do too much right now it might trigger a crash which is in no-body's interest.
The other part of the picture often missing, is the number of cashed up (mostly Chinese) buyers entering the established housing market and demolishing the existing stock and replacing it with McManchurians. This further exacerbates the price problem.
wolfstreet.com/2018/07/11/sydney-house-price-bubble-mortgage-market-royal-commission/
It "Hit the Mortgage Market Over the Head with a Baseball Bat"
Australia's housing market is getting rattled. The mortgage industry is in turmoil. Banks are battered by incessant revelations of misconduct. Home prices in the Sydney and Melbourne metros, after surging to an astounding degree, are deflating. And the once splendid and vast game of real-estate speculation just isn't fun anymore.
.....But Lindsay David writes: "It is our view based on all the resources made available that house prices in the Sydney area have broadly fallen somewhere between 11% and 15% over the comparison period."...
....We stand with the view the Sydney housing bubble appears to have been pricked, and we are confident that house prices will continue to fall at a moderate to fast pace over the coming months.....
"Desperation"? .............. not yet ............ right now sellers will be experiencing "Hope" .............. "Desperation" is still on the way.
Great timing to get yourself into your position psychomub, time is definitely on your side
Seems like in Sydney everyone's sitting on the sidelines waiting to see what happens. I think it's going to take at least a year or so to see the full effect of the changes. Definitely a good time to be sitting around with cash in your pocket (unless a dose of hyper inflation comes our way).
Sydney house price crash 2001 2003 2005 2007 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
It's a terrible situation; if house prices crash the economy crashes with it. See: of course, the 2007 Global Financial Crisis triggered by U.S. house prices.
The RBA can't raise rates much without stifling the economy and destabilizing the property market, thus destabilizing the economy, the property market, the economy... They have painted themselves into a corner.
If the economy booms interest rates go up with it, destabilizing the property market, which undermines the economy, etc. etc.
The Australian property market has become too big to fail.
I blame foreign investors, which were 25%+ of the NSW market last year. There has been too much capital injected into it. Too much demand generated. www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-11/foreign-buyers-not-deterred-by-rising-stamp-duty/9038014
BTW The GC until recently had a rental crisis with vacancy rates below 1% and people forced to sleep on the beach. It's quite different to Sydney. 5%+ returns are the norm. I'm even getting 7.5% on one-bedroom apartments.