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Not a very merry Christmas for the real estate industry as sales sink to a 12 year low, prices tumble and inventory soars

Property / news
Not a very merry Christmas for the real estate industry as sales sink to a 12 year low, prices tumble and inventory soars
House battered by storm

The Real Estate Institute of New Zealand's latest figures paint a sorry picture of the state of the housing market, with sales numbers and selling prices both tumbling while inventory levels soar.

The REINZ recorded just 5525 residential sales in November, down 36% compared to November last year, and down 28% from the pre-Covid level in November 2019.

It was the lowest sales volumes for the month of November since 2010.

 Prices were also well down, with the the REINZ's median price and House Price Index both declining in November.

The national median selling price dropped by another $10,000 in November to $810,000 (-1.2%)  and is now down by $115,000 (-12.4%) since it peaked in November last year.

In Auckland the median selling price is down 18% from November last year, and in the rest of the country excluding Auckland it's down 7%.

Confirming the slide in prices the REINZ House Price Index, which takes into account changes in the mix of properties sold each month, declined 1.4% in November compared to October. It's now down 13.7% compared to the peak a year ago.

Against the background of low sales and falling prices, the number of homes on the market at the end of November was up a whopping 48% year-on-year.

Those figures mean it's no surprise that properties are taking longer to sell, with the median days to sell increasing by 12 days over the last 12 months to 41 days  in November.

The interactive charts below show the monthly movements in the median prices, sales volumes and days to sell, in each region of the country.

"Buyers are again weighing up the likely impact on mortgage rates with current downward pressure on property prices," REINZ chief executive Jen Baird said.

"Those thinking of selling are again looking at the market and asking, is this the right time?"

The comment stream on this story is now closed.

Volumes sold - REINZ

Select chart tabs

NZ total
Source: REINZ
Northland
Source: REINZ
Auckland
Source: REINZ
Waikato
Source: REINZ
Bay of Plenty
Source: REINZ
Gisborne
Source: REINZ
Hawke's Bay
Source: REINZ
Manawatu
Source: REINZ
Taranaki
Source: REINZ
Wellington
Source: REINZ
Tasman
Source: REINZ
Nelson
Source: REINZ
Marlborough
Source: REINZ
West Coast
Source: REINZ
Canterbury
Source: REINZ
Otago
Source: REINZ
Southland
Source: REINZ

Median price - REINZ

Select chart tabs

NZ total
Source: REINZ
Northland
Source: REINZ
Auckland
Source: REINZ
Waikato
Source: REINZ
Bay of Plenty
Source: REINZ
Gisborne
Source: REINZ
Hawke's Bay
Source: REINZ
Manawatu
Source: REINZ
Taranaki
Source: REINZ
Wellington
Source: REINZ
Tasman
Source: REINZ
Nelson
Source: REINZ
Marlborough
Source: REINZ
West Coast
Source: REINZ
Canterbury
Source: REINZ
Otago
Source: REINZ
Southland
Source: REINZ

Days to sell - REINZ

Select chart tabs

Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ

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102 Comments

I hope you're impressed Nellbell ;-)

Up
7

haha kudos from me Yvil

Up
1

I am!
 

But now a little suspicious you are part of the RE industry - haha

Up
3

I'm not working in the RE industry but I have been investing in commercial and residential RE for the last 25 years, this helps.

Up
5

Ouchy Ouch -18% in Auckland.   But Lower Hutt at -24% is leading the race down.

So Auckland , medium price has fallen from $1,300,000 down to $1,065,000. -18.1% year-on-year. ($300 missing dollars must be rounding error or auctioneers not accepting $300 more....).

$235,000 per annum

$19,583 per month

$4,519 per week

$645 per day

$26.90 per hour

Average price in Auckland losing value faster then minimum wage could earn it, Not many work 24 hours a day or pay no tax...

Up
33

Ouch indeed. I know people in this position and the squeeze is on, with their banks' family home becoming a heavy burden on a young family for the mother to work multiple jobs with a 3 month old child.

 

I wonder when bankruptcy might be a better option?

 

Up
24

The big problem is that severe housing downturns take, on average, 6 years to play out.  There is no guarantee this will be a severe housing correction, but If you look at where we are compared to other downturns, it looks increasingly likely prices have a lot further to fall.   

https://imgur.com/a/OZ9ENSe 

 

Up
34

Thankyou Miguel. I have been ganting for the latest update to this chart!

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4

Really handy graphic, thank you, where did you get it? 

Up
0

And inflation is still raging in NZ. Employment still maxed - so interest rates have a way to go.

2023 is going to be a very tough time or some.

Up
8

What are the rare and well done prices down by? 

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3

The top quartile looses must be eye watering

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7

The upper quartile (Queenstown springs to mind as the only area not to go down) is probably ok.

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2

Nice summary IT Guy.

Are we another Ireland, Spain or every other country that has suffered a major house price 'correction/crash'? 

Every month it looks more likely, as it now looks like buyers are starting to understand their risk.

When the levee breaks on the belief that house prices only go up, falls are always slow and steady in this way as vendors accept lower offers if they want to sell.

It's worth remembering, that Ireland halved their mortgage rates to try and stop the falls after one year of declines, and still they kept tumbling for another 3 years.

So you have to ask yourself when someone like Tony the Comb or Opes Partners makes precise predictions like 'there's only another 5% fall to come'... what's going to stop the falls Uncle Tony?

Where will the demand for risk/debt come from? 

FHBs - It's far cheaper to rent, build a bigger nest egg with lower risk of capital loss or bankruptcy.

Residential investment doesn't stack up when you do the numbers. Prices are still to high.

Only owner occupiers will be in the market - and most unable to have bridging finance.

For what it's worth, I'm sticking with my original call that the market will capitulate sometime mid 2023 - meaning, mainstream media will except this is a crash and the coverage and blame game will really kick off. Just in time for some finger pointing towards an election.

I think we're at the end of the beginning, but I'm just a DGM'er that's lived through a few too many credit cycles.

 

Up
28

The falls are far greater in our first 12 months than what Ireland saw, their prices fell 6% and 9% in Dublin for their first year.

I've read comments that we're not Ireland and that we're different.  Factoring in the rate of our falls greatly exceed Ireland's, I wonder what is more likely:

  • The bottom is 30% - 40%
  • The bottom is 60% or more (like Ireland).  
Up
16

IT Guy, many thought the Housing ATM would never steal the money back! 

Now that it is, times are once again tough and will get tougher still. Equity leaking away by the day. 

 

Up
8

Thanks Greg. More good work,laying the bare Facts out in an informative and precise manner. Unfortunately,many uninformed fhb's will still make untimely buying decisions,and get financially slaughtered.

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24

Que mortgagee sales on the rise 2023. At least the banks will be ok... 😥

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2

Cue. As in cueing a cassette tape.

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4

Rewind please?

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0

No he's saying qué as in,  ¡qué malo!

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3

There's a disaster brewing here. One that was all so avoidable.

All we don't know is "Who is going to recipient?"

Current property owners or future ones?

I'm sure many of us saw John Key on TV this morning, and to me, that was a close as you can get to shouting a warning without scaring the horses.

 

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21

I missed that, cap you recap what he said?

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1

His take on inflation is due to Labour not opening up immigration..and so wages have gone up, causing  inflation? He needs to get back on the golf course.

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27

Even his golf balls are golden!

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5

He may or may not be proven correct. Australia is definitely following the John Key modus operandi and have opened up to record levels of immigration.  As a result, they currently do not have wage inflation like NZ has, and the RBA is forecasting a far lower terminal OCR than the RBNZ and a far slower pace of interest rate rises.  If they pull it off, then Key (and Australia) will be proven right.  If not, then they just get mad inflation, a crashing property market, a rental crisis, and reduced standard of living of citizens for nothing.  Time will tell.  If Key and Australia is right though, what happens to this country when everyone flees NZ for Australia?

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1

They also have an astounding shortage of rentals, pushing rents up and keeping the [quote]vampire squid landlords[/quote] happy.

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3

Roughly (or gently!) - Interest rates have further to rise. Property price have further to fall through 2023. ANZ is assessing new borrowers 'in the 8%'s, and 'things' are looking a bit fragile.

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18

Just tried ANZ's How Much Can I Borrow calculator and they will offer me a DTI of 5.9 and they calculate the payment based on 7.99%

Borrowing Calculator | How much can I borrow? | ANZ Store

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8

Yes, very similar result here. They are ‘offering’ me a DTI of 5.4, based on 20% deposit and a 30yr term (the algorithm doesn’t know I’m 51….)

The repayments at 7.99% represent 66% of my take home salary, which is obviously bonkers.  I intend to purchase at a much more modest level in the next couple of years.....

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15

That calculator is insane. I just plugged in my gross salary, and it told me I could afford a mortgage that would come to 56% of my gross pay, and leave me (an individual) slightly more than $300 a week net to cover all other costs aside from the mortgage. With that amount I could probably afford rates, insurance, food and power and basically nothing else.  

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7

So not much has changed then ? Was the same for me in 2005, not a great paying job so just got in a flatmate paying $250 a week so that adds considerably to what you have left over each week.

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1

You must have been living somewhere pretty flash to be charging a flatmate $250 in 2005! I was living in Central Wellington at the time and $150 got you a pretty nice room walking distance from town.  

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10

Huge bedroom only 2 of us in the house and that's all inclusive, power, water, internet and you get your own bathroom. etc. 

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0

I also got an absurd figure.

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2

The Kiwibank calculator is a bit better, it at least asks a few more pertinent questions, like what are your outgoings, do you have student loans, etc.

 

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0

And to think, 12 months ago they were stress testing at 5.8%.  What complete and utter incompetence.  Did they not know that interest rates can't stay low forever?  Oh wait, apparently that's the borrowers problem and not the outfit actually conducting the stress test.    

I wonder what the stress test rates would have actually been the interest rates on the loan documents were capped at the test rate?  Maybe the banks would have been forced to lend a little less........Maybe interest rates would have been a little higher.  

 

Up
8

Just watched this interview on YouTube. Had to laugh at what John key thinks is "tragic". When he can't get a booking at a restaurant because they can't afford to pay staff enough to live. The fact you can't pay staff is tragic John. Not that you can't get your booking!

Up
2

When the figures aren't pretty, just lead with anecdotes:

REINZ October data: buyer interest increases, but not reflected in market activity 

 

...

However, over the last couple of months, salespeople have observed an increase in enquiries and a noticeable increase in the number of first home buyers back in the market," Baird observes.  

 

Up
22

This is the key stat:

 

'Confirming the slide in prices the REINZ House Price Index, which takes into account changes in the mix of properties sold each month, declined 1.4% in November compared to October. It's now down 13.7% compared to the peak a year ago.'

With another year of falls looking nailed on we are looking at falls of 25-30% by this time next year. In anyone's language that's crash territory. A house rising 50% from $1million gets to $1.5m, but a $1.5m house only has to fall 33% to get back to a million.........in terms of absolute values it's faster on the way down......

 

Up
23

if we take nearly 8% annual inflation into the equation. The real fall is even higher than that.

Up
5

There is still time to become a bag holder, get in quick!

Up
18

May the schadenfreude be with you, always.

Up
4

This party is just getting started, more downside to go. There are going to be a lot of opportunities on the horizon for cashed up investors and first home buyers. Patience will bring reward. 

Up
17

Is this what people actually think ? Why not try playing a different game, hopefully what we are about to experience brings a normality to owning a house, and makes housing as an investment as unattractive as shares were post the 87 crash.

Up
17

In outskirts of Canterbury and I am seeing a lot of new builds sitting on the market now, still priced at 1-1.2 million but looks like no one is buying. Presume the builder needs to sell for around the million mark to get anything out of it, but the amount of houses as they are completed, are getting more numerous. Can't see it getting better if rates continue rise next year and expectations from people are wait as they still need to drop 10-15% so why risk losing equity and buy later. Meanwhile the builders cashflow is drying up week by week.

Up
13

In my quiet street near the centre of Chch there have been three houses on ~1/4 acre sections bowled in the last month or two ready for townhouses to go in. I suspect the developers are not reading the tea leaves very well. 

Up
14

The idea that a house on the outskirts of Christchurch was ever worth a million dollars is an example of how ridiculous the bubble got. 

Up
8

Last month I wondered if we were seeing a change in trend of just a seasonal spring boost overlaid on a longer downward trend. Here's the answer I guess - no sign of hitting the bottom yet. You'd be brave to invest money at this point. 

https://reinz.co.nz/Media/Default/Monthly%20Press%20Release%20Assets/Re…

Up
5

"The Real Estate Institute of New Zealand's latest figures paint a sorry picture of the state of the housing market"

Really? Come on. The language at play about housing in New Zealand is so ridiculously slanted to existing owners and investors who already have theirs.

The real sorry picture has been decades of skyrocketing prices and unaffordability for what previous generations took for granted - the security of a roof over their heads.

The whiplash of the market unwinding as quickly as it shot up post covid is not the ideal situation, but the miserly framing really contrasts with the glushing glee that was on display on the way up. I'd argue that run was even more devastating for your average FHB than the present situation (barring those that bought at the peak last year and will be about to refix onto some insane payments).

Up
29

68pc of people in N Z own a house so there are a lot of people affect by this story state.

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2

Not so ... 68% of people live in an owner occupied house, quite different.

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13

So if a landlord rents rooms to 4 other people but still lives in the house, or if a 30 year old still lives their parents house, that's considered, they all count towards the 68%

Up
3

Where are those wise and salient words from our good friend TTP to "calm the farm" in this particular time, with his infinite wisdom, coupled with his extensive experience in this industry ?  

Up
19

Also waiting for HW2 to tell us that the falls are decreasing and increasing prices are just around the corner. 

Up
16

Mirror mirror on the wall, did I bag the biggest bargains of them all?

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6

Such "gallant" soldiers appear to be AWOL! 

Up
10

Perhaps they are on the phone to their agent desperately trying to sell while there is some equity left

Up
4

Or Property guru Ashley Church. His incredible knowledge of the history of the NZ housing market not proving quite so useful now. Taleb was right all along, what a surprise.

Up
23

Just what i think.. 

The sales at 12 year low but the prices of housing are still at all time highs and in the unrealistic range where buying is just stupidity.

I don't see value in borrowing so much money that it will take more than a life time to pay it back. Alas we only get one life to live and hopefully enjoy it if have enough left up enjoy with.

Probably I am not thinking in too much negative territory. 

Up
14

Where is Ashley???

Up
7

Church?

Up
17

.....now are going to see the "reverse" of the madness that was the Auckland real estate market up to 2021 .....and the banks will still win.......even though the BIS is owed $65,000,000,000,000 (TRILLION) ....the money was never "real" in the first place .....it was created using fractional reserve banking ...... lending out money the banks never had.....an "illusion" .......it all "beer & skittles" going up .....but now, to all those that have "taken the bait" and borrowed to the max .....I will leave you to fill in the blank .......

 

 

Up
6

Time to FOOP your pants.

Up
7

it was created using fractional reserve banking 

Actually, Werner rejects the idea of fractional reserve banking. His idea is that banks create credit out of nothing. 

https://sovereignmoney.site/werner-typology-of-banking-theories 

Up
1

J.C. ...I know for the big 4 Aussie banks, they have to have some "equity" on their books for the regulators ....but whether it's money just created by a push of a key or a bank term deposit of $100,000 used for 10 loans of $100,000 ....it all ends up in a clusterf*ck, no matter which way you "slice and dice". 

Anyway, as George Carlin always said ....."It's A BIG Club & You Ain't In It!" ...and btw just watch SBF get off scot free  - his connections are the "Club" 

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2

but whether it's money just created by a push of a key or a bank term deposit of $100,000 used for 10 loans of $100,000 

This is why I wonder if FTX and SBF is all a big experiment to see how the sheeple react. In many ways, there are many similarities with how the 'real' financial and monetary systems operate. 

Up
2

Yep J.C. I reckon we are in for some very interesting times ...and you may of heard SBF was arrested in the Bahamas, while his Law professor parents will not be teaching next semester  - obviously they realize there is quite a court case coming up  ......"understatement" 

You may be right  - they will take SBF to the cleaners, markets will drop further, debts won't be paid .....and then here comes the "great reset" whatever that may look like ??? with the much talked about CBDC's .....and sadly freedoms will be lost, with CBDC's able to be programmed where they are spent. 

I believe in "less Government in business" and let the market only, be the price decider  and not the Govt. or the banks (esp. with houses !) 

Anyway, this is "back end" of all the craziness that was the great NZ PPP "Property Ponzi Party"  ! ....while the only good thing to come out of this is that the sheeple will now realize the "true value" of money and it always, in some form, has to be paid back. 

So are you in the "Ripple Army" or not ? :) 

 

 

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0

Not just Werner - Bank of  England also lol

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1

The sources of bank money include households putting money in savings and other deposits at banks, but also banks borrowing from large investors, like pension funds, on international “wholesale” money markets.

 

https://i.stuff.co.nz/business/money/130570693/why-dont-fixed-term-inte…

Up
0

Imo property will take a while to rebound.

Mainly because of this mantra over the last several decades that NZ house prices "only go up". That has in part caused the feeding frenzy in the housing market.

When the general population realises its not in fact an impenetrable investment and they start seeing people losing their homes, it will have a lasting effect on how people view housing.

Of course it will still be an NZ dream to own your own house. But I doubt residential housing will hold investor confidence like it previously did for a while. Especially for small time investors. I think public sentiment will take a while to recover if too many people get burnt.

That's just my psychological take on it. But who knows.

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18

Until we get back to a more reasonable house price to median income multiple then we are in trouble. The trick will be to bring prices down enough, and incomes up enough to lower that multiple. And then when they are down, adjust the system so they only ever increase in line with general inflation, ie no speculative behaviour.

Just like when prices went up, there are winners and losers, then as the prices fall so there are others, and unfortunately, some people will get it both ways.

But there is no economy in the world that has ever engineered a soft fall to a lower sustainable median multiple.

The best analogy I can think of for the NZ economic system is an old Dunedin student flat, that is too far gone to renovate, but the yield is great from all the students crammed into it. But when the time is forced upon the landlord to do something, he will have to bulldoze it and build new (but only just meeting NZ code which is the worst house you can legally build).  The yields have peaked and are starting to fall and the bulldozer is now on its way.

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5

Even more interesting than these latest REINZ stats is Tony Alexander's survey of agents showing that these latest rounds of hikes is having a major impact on the ground in real-time. The next few months of data in from REINZ will show further significant falls and we could easily be looking at Auckland being down ~25% from the peak by March. 

 

https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5ce1fd700bf20400017d3a30/t/638d5… 

Up
10

The tower of stupidity constructed in the last ten years was underpinned by ever cheaper debt and mass immigration. The foundations have been removed. Money now costs...well real money with more to come, and immigration is net negative. The thing that makes me laugh the most is commercial sellers still expecting transactions based on 4-5% yield.

You can get a better return with your money in the bank and a lot less risk.

Jenga time...

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21

Don't assume we're net negative immigration for long.  Heaps of people from much less desirable places in the world than NZ will arrive here if we make it easy enough for them, which sounds like we are.

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7

Very aptly put. The government having to continually loosen migration policy after 2 years of planning is likely due to limited interest out there among genuinely skilled workers to move here.

Some of the most talented individuals I have worked with are from overseas, but the system favours economic refugees who can serve as labour feedstock in our farms and kitchens.

And it was not a case of “a few bad apples” but it was systemicRSE workers being treated ‘like slaves’, Equal Employment Opportunity Commissioner says | Stuff.co.nz

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11

Yip, the floodgates are well open now.

Back to the old Student work visa scams and the like.

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6

Normally I would agree.  But it appears that just about every Western nation is having a labour market crisis at the moment. So the question becomes "why move to NZ when I can move to Canada, Australia, UK, or USA?"  What do we have to offer to people thats better than the alternative destination?  Our wages are lower, our weather is worse, we are at the bottom of the world, our cost of living is sky high, and its now a racially divided country (and immigrants get lumped in with the colonialists in terms of access to education/healthcare/welfare etc). 

Australia has thrown open the immigration gates, and it appears people are flocking there in droves.  The number of international students enrolled is at a record high. The govt has processed 3.4M visas, with a promise to tackle the last 1M of visas sitting in the queue.  They are prioritising the processing of Kiwi's pathway to residency visas.  Rental vacancies there are 1%, rents are up 10% YoY and there is little wage inflation so the RBA is slowing down rate rises and lowering their terminal OCR forecasts. 

If NZ can't compete on immigration and we keep losing people to Australia, our labour market remains tight, wage inflation goes through the roof, interest rate rises keep coming, the property market keeps crashing, and more people move to Australia ... and the cycle repeats.

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4

Yes. New migrants on temporary visas aren't allowed to buy a house in NZ until they secure residence likely in a year or two. You'd also hope those on the green list eligible for residence are smart enough to comprehend the situation and not catch a falling knife.

Adding class-5 drivers and nurses to the green list might be a good move to ease labour pressures in critical industries, but these workers don't earn enough to service large borrowings on [still] overpriced houses at high interest rates.

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7

Wonder what they are down in Auckland in terms of a basket of food. 30% plus?

 

Money losing value almost as fast as real estate.

 

Where does one store there wealth?

 

Open the immigration tap solves all the problems and lose the current arrogant Labour party who continually think in small isolated idealistic terms due to none having actually lived or worked in the real economy 

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2

Physical gold

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1

Just imagine what’s going to happen to house sales and prices when  the OCR goes up 50/75 points in February. It has to get tougher to borrow so prices will have to continue to drop accordingly.

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8

Housing bubble crash - TTP current status update:

1. Rising prices

2. FOMO

3. Euphoria

4. Denial

5. Disbelief

6. Panic

7. Bust

 

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21

There are not many comments one can repost month after month. This is quite the exception ✔️

Just when your indicator is heading south from the panic state, its time to buy😊

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11

Assuming everyone goes on holiday, or staycation, until the end of January. Things now pause in number 5. Disbelief.   

Whats the trigger to move to the Panic stage?

Individual rate resets on mortgages in the New Year?

Developers going into Liquidation over the next month?

Property in Vauxhall Road (cv 5.25mil) , Cheltenham Beach up tomorrow, its undergoing a renovation, its GUTTED IE you are buying a weatherproof shell, looks like someone may have run out of Moola, stunning views cannot be built out, be a very good test of the market as it looks to me like it may have to sell.

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9

Auckland City area down 22.7% compared with a year ago! 

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4

What is interesting about  Auckand is that there is only now starting to show the decline.  People comment on Wellington's fall but in fact Wellingtonian's accepted the declines and did deals at lower rates - so the stock of housing is 13 weeks of inventory - while in Auckland the actual declines weren't evident as people didn't sell which is why there is 28 weeks of inventory - and building. 

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10

Good point, thats going to show up in Feb/Mar/April.

Aucklanders get paid basically the same as Wellingtonians, while its arguable why Auckland is clearly a nicer place to live, our houses have way Higher prices thus worse DTI optics.    Could this difference contract we could see real movement in AKL.

Comment partially deleted. Watch your spelling of Annus Horribilis if you intend to use the phrase. - GN

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1

Actually Wellingtonian's get paid more. Auckland wages are low because a lot of industry is there that doesn't belong there. This is a function of the accommodation supplement. 

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1

Wellingtonians get paid more because most of them work for Govt, either directly as civil servants or more likely as govt consultants, and Labour has an unlimited budget when it comes to funding working committees of consultants.  Wellington house prices might be crashing faster as those consultants read the writing on the wall and start looking for new jobs in 2023 and downsizing their expenses.

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1

Prices decline is clearly visible and is on path for meaningful correction (Correction is 20% Plus fall).

FHB, if like a house can opt, if available near around 30% down from peak or near pre pandemic value as many vendors will not sell but FHB only need one genuine vendor who has to sell.

1.2 Million house going for near around $900ks and in future may fall further but if get at a discount and like the house, why not. 

A colleague recently bought a house that failed in Auction. After failed auction were encouraging any offer over 1.1 Million (Before Auction were looking over 1.150 Million Plus as similar houses had sold last year for 1.2 Milllion plus). Than early this month was changed from negotiation above 1.1 Million to asking 1.019Million and finally sold for $950K. In future similar house could go for $900k or in $800ks (in 2023)  but this colleague was happy to get at pre pandemic level and move on as was comfortable.

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5

At this rate we might be able to afford to go back & live in Auckland - this time next year.

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4

Next:

Property prices drop 50% as inflation and recession take full swing

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7

Clearly the reverse wealth effect isn't occuring fast enough yet to really slow consumer spending. Until it does rates are virtually a one way bet.

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3

For those wanting to move across the ditch. This is Tasmania, Launceston.

https://www.realestate.com.au/property-house-tas-west+launceston-141083840?sourcePage=rea:p4ep:property-details&sourceElement=avm-currently-advertised-view-listing

In 2020 and 2021, Tasmania was the darling of all property investors, it captured the highest capital gain in Australia and highest rental yield. But this year, it's slowing down quite a bit!

 

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1

Nice 'brick' home. On face value alone, that is totally reasonable, and am sure many here would like to see the NZ market in a similar situation.

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Auckland drop about half of what it will be in total.

I said on here in 2021 that market will drop 35% top to bottom. Consensus was about 10-15%. 

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I need to buy a modest residential property in Auckland City for work as I live in the Waikato. I have been waiting patiently and studying the data. In the city HPI data shows a 20.9% drop from peak. I think it will decline another 10-15% (opinion only). At the current rate of decline that will take 5-7 months so I see this happening in June / July next year. The election will begin to alter behaviour at about that time too. If National / Act look likely then the market may start to anticipate some sympathetic legislation change and this will also help to level out the decline. My 2c of guesswork.

 

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Anyone else notice Auckland's house price growth flatlined between 2016 and the start of COVID? Didn't happen in other places. The reason? Methinks the Auckland Unitary Plan of 2016 facilitated the building of many more dwellings on existing land.

The relevance today is that central government forced all other Councils to implement one of Auckland's more dense zones - Mixed Housing Urban - throughout the entire country via the MDRS. And add to that the NPS/UD forces all major city Councils to implement 6+ stories in metro zones and walkable catchments.

That's a massive potential supply of "new" land for dwellings.

Methinks those who believe there will be a return to house price growth once interest rates come down a bit will be sadly mistaken. A rough running of the numbers suggests house price growth (capital gains) will be insignificant for 10-20 at least and perhaps even longer. 

Funny thing tho ... You don't hear banks, nor property perma-bulls, even mention this fact. Be careful out there people.

 

 

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A change of government that will open the immigration floodgates and bring back negative gearing on residential housing will change that graph.

There's a lot of people emigrating due to the cost of living, crime rate, forced acculturation and racial division too. Fix that lot and we have a chance to maintain our first world status.

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Quite sad that there are people that think a change of government will change NZs inexorable slide. NZs issues didn't just appear in the last few years, they have been 30 + years in the making. Most of NZs social issues can be blamed on housing and how out of control Natbour let things get. 

Housing will still be too expensive relative to incomes this time next year - my advice for anyone, especially the young - leave. NZ is a beautiful country but a pretty average place to live. 

I think NZ will be in a much worse position socially and economically in 5 years than it is today. Can't see any governments making the difficult decisions that need to be made. 

This property market collapse could be the best hope NZ has got for getting its economy on track - but I think central government are probably too small minded to get it and will provide some sort of welfare to prop the market up.

 

 

 

 

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Didn't say it would make NZ better. But a change of govt policies will support house prices.

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