Monday, 4 October 2021

Lending restrictions could hit property investors

Property investors are likely to find it harder to obtain the big mortgages often required to buy free-standing homes after regulators signalled they would likely act to tighten lending rules.

The Council of Financial Regulators says that with credit growth materially outpacing growth in household income, there is increasing medium-term risks facing the economy, even though lending standards remain sound.

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), which is a member of the council, is weighing up what measures it could take to curb riskier borrowing.

One of the tools APRA could use is to make lenders subject to a cap on mortgage lending to borrowers with a ratio of more than six times debt to annual gross income – the point at which it considers the lending to be risky.

CoreLogic data released on Friday show Sydney house prices are now up 25.8 per cent since the year began, with Melbourne prices up 16.2 per cent.

In September, Sydney’s median house price soared by $18,000 to $1,311,641 – a stunning gain of about $600 a day. In Melbourne, the median jumped by $7750 to $962,250 – up about $260 a day.

Nationally, the monthly growth rate in prices slowed to 1.5 per cent, compared to its peak rate of 2.8 per cent in March.

The CoreLogic figures show house values are generally rising faster than unit values, a trend that has been evident throughout most of the COVID-19 period, especially in capital cities.

“There has been a shift by investors from units to free-standing houses,” says Doron Peleg, founder of RiskWise Property Research.



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Buying an investment property in a boom can be risky

I am a 45-year-old nurse earning about $120,000 a year, with living expenses of $27,000 and superannuation of about $213,000. I used to salary sacrifice to the maximum but stopped in the past three years, since I filed for bankruptcy in February 2019, due to a disastrous property investment in the mining town of Newman, Western Australia. I will be discharged from bankruptcy in February 2022. After discharge at age 46, I plan to buy a house for about $650,000 with a $140,000 cash deposit. I wonder if I should continue to salary sacrifice to the maximum of $27,500 a year, or should I focus on fully paying off my mortgage? I plan to pay it off in 6.5 years, earning about $150,000 from July 2022 onwards. I am single and have no children. After I pay off my mortgage at age 53, I can finally stop working night shifts and my income will come down to $95,000 a year. I plan to retire at age 60 – when I’m still healthy. L.L.

I always set two main goals for retirement: to stop working with a fully paid-off house and enough money in super to produce the tax-free income you need for living expenses. It is hard when starting from scratch – and not always possible.

At the end of the day, if both goals cannot be achieved, there is always the safety net of the age pension. So, that’s why I suggest giving priority to paying off your mortgage before salary sacrificing to top up your employer’s 10 per cent super contributions.

That’s sad news about your bankruptcy.

I am aware that house prices in mining towns peaked in 2011-12 during the mining boom. An ABC news report indicates Pilbara median house prices later fell more than 80 per cent when the boom soured.

It is a good lesson that buying an investment property in a boom can be risky, even though prices in Newman have since turned up.

I am aged 46, earning $190,000 a year and my wife, 47, is working four days a week and earning $120,000. We are both relatively healthy and have two children aged 11 and 9, due to go to private high schools at a cost of $40,000 a year each in 2023 and 2025, respectively. We own our home valued at $2.4 million and have $955,000 in joint investments, plus $556,000 in my super and $358,000 in my wife’s super. We also have an investment unit valued at $450,000 with a mortgage of $400,000. Our combined monthly income is $17,000. Our monthly expenses are $10,000 (excluding private school fees). We would like to maintain this lifestyle, or close to it, for the rest of our lives, adjusted for future inflation. We have both earned relatively high incomes for most of our working lives and have a relatively modest but comfortable lifestyle, prioritising the needs of our children. We both would like to retire at age 50. Are we on track? P. L.

If you retire at 50, your wife would have a statistical life expectancy of some 37 years and, as always, I add five years to that, assuming she is healthy and will live longer than the average.

If you then plan to spend $120,000 a year, indexed to 3 per cent for inflation, you could expect to go through savings of about $2.7 million. On top of that, you would spend about $500,000 on school fees, plus significantly more on sports plus any private tuition and then tertiary education.

I suspect you should plan on working until your children finish their education – possibly longer – while maximising your super contributions.

I purchased a unit in 2001 for $432,000 and moved out in 2007. It has been fully renovated with a new kitchen, bathroom, flooring, laundry and garage door. The total cost was $33,105 and other costs include stamp duty is $29,191. Over the years, I have claimed all council rates etc. I would like to sell the unit this year. The agent estimates it will fetch as much as $1.2 million. What is the best way to calculate the Capital Gains Tax (CGT)? M.W.

Step 1: Hire a good accountant.

Step 2: Give them the original sale contract for the property, as well as receipts for all your renovations, plus tax returns to show what you have claimed. This allows the accountant to determine your “cost base” and also how much, if any, could have been claimed, but wasn’t.

Let’s say you have spent $500,000 up to now and that your selling costs come to, say, $30,000, including agent’s commission.

If you sell for $1.2 million, your capital gain would be $670,000, half of which, or $335,000, would be added to your assessable income.

It doesn’t sound as though the property is held in joint names, so assuming no other income in 2021-22, the CGT would be about $128,000. Ouch!

  • Advice given in this article is general in nature and is not intended to influence readers’ decisions about investing or financial products. They should always seek their own professional advice that takes into account their own personal circumstances before making any financial decisions. 

 

Article Source: www.brisbanetimes.com.au



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Friday, 1 October 2021

Brisbane apartment insights: What happened to Brisbane apartment values in September?

Brisbane apartment values continued to grow over September, figures from the property data firm CoreLogic found.

In their monthly index, CoreLogic found that Brisbane values rose 0.6 per cent over September, taking their te

It was a return to a normal growth pattern for Brisbane, following a 1.4 per cent growth spike over August. Prior to the spike, there were 0.8 per cent gains in July and 0.7 per cent gains in June.

The 2.8 per cent rolling quarterly gains, more than double the gains seen in Melbourne, see values 8.3 per cent higher than at the start of 2021.

Back then the median value was $390,000. Now it’s $430,000.

The price gap between houses and units in Brisbane however has widened, with Brisbane’s median house price standing at $709,000, around $280,000 higher than the median apartment price.

New listings in Brisbane are slowly on the up ahead of the traditional listing increase in spring. The same can be said for Adelaide, Perth and Hobart, however the trend remains weak in the locked-down Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra.

Queensland has benefitted from record low vacancy rates, with southern state dwellers heading north during the pandemic over 12 months ago.

The June 2021 quarter data from the Real Estate Institute of Queensland showed that nearly two thirds of local government areas in Queensland recorded their lowest or equal lowest residential vacancy rates since 2010.

Of the 35 local government areas, 20 saw their vacancy rates tighten, 10 remained static and five saw them slightly rise in the June quarter.

Brisbane’s vacancy rate dropped from 2.1 per cent to 1.7 per cent from the previous quarter. The Gold Coast’s remained static at a tight 0.6 per cent and the Sunshine Coast’s was slightly higher, from 0.5 per cent to 0.6 per cent.

Urban’s top Brisbane projects

1. Trellis, South Brisbane 

Brisbane apartment values

Trellis 20 Edmondstone Street, South Brisbane QLD 4101 

Aria Property Group are a decorated Queensland developer who have continued to improve sustainability across their South East Queensland residential apartment developments with their newest tower, Trellis.

Described as both the most sustainable and livable to date, all 110 of the two and three bedroom apartments in the 12 story building have been designed by Rothelowman.

Reminiscent of an urban retreat, Trellis reflects a new style of resort living with 1,119 sqm of recreational amenity across the Temple of Wellness on the ground floor and the Residents’ Rooftop Club on level 13.

Apartments in Trellis start from $739,000 for a two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment. Three-bedroom apartments are priced from $1,084,000 to $1,224,000.

2. Bide, Newstead 

Brisbane apartment values

Bide 21 Longland Street, Newstead QLD 4006 

Bide is the latest Newstead residential offering by Dibcorp Properties. It has been designed in collaboration with architects from Twohill & James, Lat27 and Wiltshire Stevens Architecture.

It presents a new way of inner-city-living, with a range of special inclusions and an urban green space exclusively for residents to relax, unwind and even work from home.

Bide comprises 89 spacious one, two and three-bedroom apartments just three kilometres from the CBD.

Two-bedroom apartments start from $635,000.

3. Silk Lane, Woolloongabba 

Brisbane apartment values

Silk Lane 8-12 Trafalgar Street, Woolloongabba QLD 4102 

Silk Lane will give residents the best seats in the house when the sporting arena is back in a post-lockdown world.

The building’s architectural façade, designed by Nettleton Tribe Architects, draws inspiration from the angular shapes of metal structure incorporated in the neighbouring Brisbane cricket ground, The Gabba. The appropriately named Skystand will look over the wicket for The Ashes, and the main hub of the 2032 Brisbane Olympic track and field events.

Developed by Sarazin, Silk Lane will home 306 one, two and three-bedroom apartments.

Prices start from $449,000.

4. Rivello, Hamilton 

Brisbane apartment values

Rivello 15 Wharf Street, Hamilton QLD 4007 

here’s only a handful of apartments left at Rivello, the luxury apartment development by Brookfield Properties in Hamilton.

The 21-level building designed by Cottee Parker Architects has netted over 80 per cent of sales of the block of 150 apartments.

Brookfield Residential Properties’ Managing Director, Lee Butterworth, said buyers had responded well to Rivello.

“There is certainly significant demand for Brisbane property in the current market and buyers recognise Rivello represents a rare opportunity to purchase a new apartment in a building on the Brisbane River,” he said.

 

Article Source: www.urban.com.au



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Apartment approvals on the rise: ABS

Dwelling approvals data released by the ABS show that approvals in the month of August grew across all of mainland Australia, except in NSW

Attached dwelling approvals – for apartments, townhouses and semi-detached homes – have jumped, according to data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Attached dwelling approvals rose 13.7% in August, sitting at 6,453.

It was the highest August figure since 2017.

Total approvals over the year to August was up 8.5 per cent at 74,000.

“The lag from approvals to work done suggests dwelling construction will remain strong this year,” Shane Oliver, the AMP Capital chief economist said.

The overall number of dwellings approved rose 6.8 per cent in August (seasonally adjusted) to 18,716 homes, ending four consecutive monthly declines.

The number of dwelling approvals rose in Western Australia (21 per cent), South Australia (11.8 per cent), Victoria (10.5 per cent) and Queensland (4 per cent).

 approvals

Falls were recorded in Tasmania (-18.9 per cent) and New South Wales (-2.3 per cent).

It represented a recovery from a 8.6 per cent dip in July. The peak month was March with 23,445 approvals.

The increase was driven by approvals for private sector dwellings other than houses, which rose 13.7 per cent, ABS construction statistics director Daniel Rossi said.

Rossi noted the result was driven by record low interest rates, boosted household savings and confidence in the housing market.

Total approvals over the year to August was 229,035, up by almost a third on their level a year earlier.

After some improvement in approvals performance in NSW in the earlier part of this year, the lockdown has seen a reversal with approvals going backwards for the 4th month in a row, Tom Forrest at the Urban Taskforce noted.

“That said, they remain well above the number of approvals recorded this time last year,” Forrest said.

 

Article Source: www.urban.com.au



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Brisbane’s best property buys: Six must-see homes starting from $259,000

Despite the rising market, it is still possible to buy a property within a few kilometres of the CBD for less than $300,000.

14/75 Thorn Street, Kangaroo Point 

Brisbane’s best property buys

Demand in Brisbane’s inner circle has been hot in 2021, so buyers with small budgets are working hard to find grubstakes. Here is one, a river turn from the city. Yes, it is a small grub – only 37 square metres of floor plan – but it comes with a big location. The designer studio apartment has an L-shaped, 16-square-metre balcony, a car space, lofty level-three balcony views and access to a shared pool.

$259,000

Private sale

Ray White, Benjamin Williams 0412 067 016

4/2 Prospect Terrace, Red Hill 

Brisbane’s best property buys

Three kilometres northwest of the CBD, a one-bedroom pad has reached the market with a price tag under $300,000. One of eight in its brick block, it has an open-plan design with big windows to flood it with sunlight. It could be a base for a city professional, investor or student. It is about 500 metres from Kelvin Grove State College campus and was last sold in 2013.

$285,000-plus

Private sale

Liliana Mauri Properties, Liliana Mauri 0404 644 006

6/104 Richmond Road, Morningside 

Brisbane’s best property buys

Savvy buyers know townhouses often grant access to inner suburbs’ amenities at significantly lower buy-in prices than standalone houses. This three-bedroom, double-storey home is a fine example with its modern open plan linking dining, lounge and kitchen to a private rear courtyard. The median sale price for three-bedroom houses in Morningside this year has been $765,000 based on 100 sales. Cannon Hill State School is about 900 metres away.

$515,000-plus

Private sale

REMAX Results, Kylee Harnisch 0438 763 975

4/15 Alice Street, Kedron 

Brisbane’s best property buys

Real estate people often proclaim properties are “edgy”, but it is an apt word to describe the asymmetrical facade of this contemporary block. One of its two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartments is for sale. It has an L-shaped floor plan and unorthodox 5.07-by-2.16-metre balcony, partially inset to its open living-dining and kitchen area. It has a single car park.

$399,000-plus

Private sale

AUMR Property Group, Jay Wu 0402 686 929

11 College Way, Boondall 

Brisbane’s best property buys

This suburban area formerly known as Cabbage Tree Creek has hit its stride this century. It’s home to just under 10,000 people, of which 48 per cent are long-termers – which speaks loudly to Boondall’s easygoing, well-connected lifestyle. This four-bedroom makes a strong case, with its two bathrooms and a double garage on a flat 516-square-metre block. The kitchen has stone benches and stainless steel appliances. College Way has 147 properties and 80 per cent are owner-occupied.

$749,000-plus

Private sale

Ray White, Angela Duncan 0433 335 849

20 Saint Albans Street, Kenmore

Brisbane’s best property buys

Fans of 1960s residential housing design get an architectural showpiece at this understated three-bedroom brick house set on a manicured 549-square-metre block that was last sold in 1997. The interior is conservative and neat with the scope to swing into the 21st century with a cosmetic upgrade. All 13 properties in this settled establishment street are occupied by their owners. Kenmore South State School is about 400 metres from the driveway.

$760,000-plus

Private sale

Leighton Jones Real Estate, Leighton Jones 0468 900 200 

 

Article Source: www.domain.com.au



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What you can buy around regional Australia for capital city property prices

Cashing in on city property prices for a larger home in the country or on the coast has long been a key drawcard for many a sea and tree-changer.

But against a backdrop of soaring property prices in many regional areas, capital city budgets may not stretch as far as they once did in some popular coastal and country locations.

Median house prices in dozens of regional council areas are up by more than 20 per cent in a year, Domain data shows, in some instances outstripping the prices seen in their respective capital cities.

“There have been a few [city buyers] ring up thinking they can buy a property for less than half of its worth, and I say I can’t help you,” said Matt Knight – a buyer’s agent and director of Precium – of the NSW south coast market.

Thankfully, most buyers are more clued in by now on the rapid price growth seen in the regions, particularly areas that have seen an influx of demand from tree and sea-changers amid the pandemic. However, many were frustrated by the high prices and low stock levels, with some clients spending a year searching before they engaged his services, Mr Knight said.

For those city slickers considering a sea or tree change, here’s what you can expect to get for capital city prices.

Brisbane

A Brisbane buyer looking to sell up at the city’s record median house price of about $678,000 and head for the coast is likely to have to downsize if looking to the Sunshine Coast or Gold Coast, where medians sit at $825,000 and $792,000. A two-bedroom Mermaid Beach unit recently sold for $670,000, as did a three-bedroom unit at Coolum Beach.

Further afield in the state’s north, a five-bedroom house with views and a pool in the Cairn’s suburbs of Mooroobool sold for $680,000, while a two-bedroom, two-bathroom townhouse on a 132-square-metre block in  Port Douglas – where prices jumped about 29 per cent in the past year – sold for $660,000.

Property prices

Perth

House prices in Perth are now at their highest level since 2015, after lifting about 12 per cent over the year to a little less than $596,000.

Taking that budget outside the capital, a house hunter could expect to pick up something similar to a four-bedroom house in West Busselton, which recently sold for $574,000, and a four-bedroom house on a bush block in outer Bunbury that sold for $595,000.

Further afield in Moresby, north-east of Geraldton and more than a four-and-a-half-hour drive north of Perth, a four-bedroom house on more than two hectares of land with ocean views recently sold for $600,000.

Meanwhile, up in Broome, where prices jumped more than 33 per cent over the year,  a four-bedroom renovated 1960s bungalow on more than a 1200-square-metre block sold for more than $570,000.

 

Article Source: www.domain.com.au



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Profit-Making Home Sales at a Decade High

Tight listings, record low mortgage rates and Australia’s extraordinary growth in housing values have led to the strongest returns for vendors in more than a decade.

According to the latest Corelogic Pain and Gain report, more than 90 per cent of homes sold in the June quarter transacted at a profit—a 9 per cent increase compared to the first quarter of the year.

The rate of growth in profits mirrors a 13.5 per cent increase in housing values in the 12 months to June with the median profit being pocketed on resales for homes typically held for 8.8 years now $265,000, and median losses $43,000.

But the recent post-pandemic surge now meant that owners were reselling after only two years at a gain of $123,000.

The report, which analyses the proportion of housing resales that delivered nominal gains or losses to sellers, is based on 100,000 dwelling resales in the quarter.

The highest instances of profitability were achieved in regional and tree-change markets, a trend being fuelled by stay-at-home orders prompting buyers to search in areas where they can find more spacious family homes with backyards or easy access to the beach.

Houses, proportion of total resales at a loss/gain 

Units, proportion of total resales at a loss/gain

Corelogic head of residential research Eliza Owen said that while nationally, profit-making property sales had increased for four consecutive quarters, a number of headwinds were combining to potentially drag on, or even reverse growth in the medium term.

“While profitability is expected to trend higher across Australia in the coming quarters, it is clear that the rate of profit-making resales mirrors the trends we’re seeing in city and regional capital growth rates,” Owen said.

“As the rate of increase in values slows, as we have started to see each month since April, so too will the momentum in profitability.

“We’re closely monitoring affordability constraints, a tighter credit environment, a resurgence in listings volumes, and some economic factors including a slowdown in the resources sector.”

In Victoria, Ballarat led the way, achieving a record high rate of profitability with 99.7 per cent of resales in the quarter achieving gains.

Other top performers included the Richmond-Tweed region, where dwellings sit 29.5 per cent higher over the year; the Sunshine Coast, where values rose 27.6 per cent; and the Launceston and North-East housing market, where dwelling values are up 26.3 per cent.

Meanwhile, inner-city markets have gone into overdrive with 97.6 per cent of houses in Sydney sold at a profit—an increase of 8 per cent on the previous month to now be at the highest level of profit-making gains in almost four decades.

Average profits for sales in regions such as Ku-ring-gai, Mosman, Woollahra and the Northern Beaches are now topping $1 million.

In Melbourne, the highest profits were achieved in Bayside, Nillumbik and Boroondara while loss-making sales were affected by border closures and weak inner-city rental market.

Brisbane, where profit-making resales have been above 90 per cent mark since January 2018, experienced an 18 per cent surge across its unit market buoyed by buyers arriving from Victoria and NSW.

Apartment markets on cusp of revival

Despite the relatively rapid improvement in profitability across units, the rate of loss-making sales nationally remains around 2.7 times higher than in the house segment.

Through the quarter, there were close to 4900 loss making-unit sales, equating to 15.3 per cent of all units sold.

The result is down from 16.6 per cent in the previous quarter, and 21 per cent from the same quarter last year.

“Weaker profitability in units relative to houses comes off the back of changes to unit demand, coupled with an increase in unit supply in recent years,” Owen said.

“There are early signs that the pace of capital growth in house values is currently slowing faster than in the unit segment.

“This may be a result of rising housing affordability pressures in the detached house segment, where combined capital city house values were sitting 32.2 per cent higher than units in August.

“The increased price pressures across the house market may see more buyers pivot to the unit segment in the coming months, and lead to an increased incidence of profit-making sales across units.”

Almost a quarter of loss-making unit sales were concentrated in central Brisbane, the Gold Coast and the Melbourne CBD.

Despite inner-city regions of Melbourne and Brisbane experiencing high volumes of loss-making unit sales, the highest proportion of loss from unit resales was in Perth, particularly Cockburn, where two-thirds of units were sold at a loss.

 

Article Source: www.theurbandeveloper.com

 



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QLD island property listed for less than house in parts of Logan

This spectacular island property off Far North Queensland has two houses, a beach hut and views to rival the Maldives. But this one w...