1 November 2013

Real Estate prices going down down down

| johnboy
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The dinner party bores have fallen silent as the ABC reports on Canberra’s ever softening real estate market:

the situation in Canberra is different where real estate prices slipped 1.5 per-cent in October.

The Housing Industry Association (HIA) says uncertainty over public service jobs is driving the fall.

HIA senior economist Shane Garrett says the easing of prices in the national capital is not surprising after the election.

“It is a fall back in price values in Canberra over the last quarter.

Having recently been looking for a rental property I was surprised to see naked panic amongst landlords. That’s got to flow on eventually.

Shall we call this a win for Andrew Barr’s affordable housing policies?

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davo101 said :

Watson said :

House prices are only of importance to first home buyers and investors.

and people looking to downsize to fund their retirements
and people looking to borrow for business purposes
and banks
and bank shareholders
and anyone who has money in a super fund that owns bank shares

and the global economy… but other than that (what have the Romans ever done for us)…

Watson said :

House prices are only of importance to first home buyers and investors.

and people looking to downsize to fund their retirements
and people looking to borrow for business purposes
and banks
and bank shareholders
and anyone who has money in a super fund that owns bank shares

Watson said :

milkman said :

shauno said :

My house price can go down to zero as far as im concerned because I dont have any intention to sell.

That’s pretty much how I feel about my own home too.

I think I would like to upgrade in the next few years (I really only want a slightly bigger yard), but if the value of my house goes down (slightly), then so will the value of the house that I want to buy. House prices are only of importance to first home buyers and investors.

From time to time, I’ve seen phrases in property ads like: “due to changes of circumstances”, “going overseas” and so on…

What the owners want is one thing. What the owners have to face is another.

milkman said :

shauno said :

My house price can go down to zero as far as im concerned because I dont have any intention to sell.

That’s pretty much how I feel about my own home too.

I think I would like to upgrade in the next few years (I really only want a slightly bigger yard), but if the value of my house goes down (slightly), then so will the value of the house that I want to buy. House prices are only of importance to first home buyers and investors.

OpenYourMind said :

I always get the impression when reading RiotACT posts on this topic that there’s a group of people that imagine impossibly cheap ‘affordable’ housing. They seem to lament the $50,000 house of yesteryear, but don’t seem to yearn for $10k per annum salaries to go with the old house prices.

Take a look at the salary history of a typical PS in Canberra at APS 5. He/she earned around 50K in 2003 and just above 70K per annum now. And imagine how the affordability dropped when house price tripled in those years.

So don’t blame the rise of salary/labour cost.

Those law students been the vast, vast majority these days.

Statistically, the median, personal net benefit for income of a law graduate is over $1.1m, compared to 200-400k for an liberal arts graduate. But that’s over a life time, and for the early portion of a career you won’t see that kind of money. You’ll be paid in line with public servants working shorter hours who have less expenses, and that’s if you get a job. Last clerkship round in Victoria saw less than 1/4 successful. The anecdotal figures from around Canberra are just as bad. Unless you know someone, or can quickly get to know someone who knows someone, you’re not going anywhere, even with prior degrees and glowing transcripts.

HiddenDragon12:41 pm 04 Nov 13

#15 milkman said:

“……Incomes in the macro may have doubled, but what trades charge for labour on jobs is MUCH higher than that (at least triple). My figure comes from experience in building and renovating over the past 15 years…..”

This interesting information should be conveyed to the law students who are fretting at the prospect they may never get to practise.

but that would include knocking down the remaining structures and removal of rubble..

watto23 said :

If you look at what insurance wants to cover to rebuild then i can tell you my 3 bedroom place is around $300k for a rebuild, assuming say a fire burnt it out.

I’d not be surprised though if for some bizarre reason it costs builders more on more expensive land 🙂

If you look at what insurance wants to cover to rebuild then i can tell you my 3 bedroom place is around $300k for a rebuild, assuming say a fire burnt it out.

I’d not be surprised though if for some bizarre reason it costs builders more on more expensive land 🙂

Having recently built a house, i’m a bit more than qualified to concur with this estimate.

My house cost (me) $314k not including land. At least $60-80k was the builders profit. My neighbour (who we know the builder) sold the house for $355k and advised that his profit was $60k.

My place included a lot of ‘expensive’ extras, but when economies of scales comes in (my builder was building 10 houses at the time) the extra’s didn’t actually come to that much and hence the lower price. Neighbours house is a little bigger, but worse fittings.

JC said :

milkman said :

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

Interesting you use the word probably, meaning of course you don’t really know. Now I don’t know the cost of labour either, but I do know what it cost me to build my house 13 years ago. That cost was $100,000 for a standard 3 bedroom house, excluding land, stamp duty etc.

Now 13 years was a long time ago, but wages have more than doubled in that time and the cost of materials doubled too. So my house would probably (again like you I don’t really know) cost $200,000-$250,000 to build again excluding land costs.

Back then to go to a 4 bedroom and separate dining I was looking at $20,000 (which I should have done in hindsight) extra so in today’s terms using the method above that would be $40,000.

So using some real figures and some thought I would say the cost to build a standard 4 bedroom house, materials and wages would be in the order of $250,000 to $300,000 excluding land.

Now looking around at land prices and the cost of brand new houses, I reckon I am pretty much on the money with these figures.

So where did your figure of $250k for labour alone come from?

HiddenDragon said :

Before we know it, the VFT will make us a commuter suburb of Sydney,

we’ll fly to work in our hover cars, take holidays on the moon, and atomic power will make electricity too cheap to bother metering.

Also, most new houses include a double garage as a standard – which was probably not the case with older houses. Ducted heating and cooling and vacuum is also common these days, wheres older houses had stand-alone gas or electric heaters which were cheaper to install.

neanderthalsis9:07 am 04 Nov 13

milkman said :

JC said :

milkman said :

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

Interesting you use the word probably, meaning of course you don’t really know. Now I don’t know the cost of labour either, but I do know what it cost me to build my house 13 years ago. That cost was $100,000 for a standard 3 bedroom house, excluding land, stamp duty etc.

Now 13 years was a long time ago, but wages have more than doubled in that time and the cost of materials doubled too. So my house would probably (again like you I don’t really know) cost $200,000-$250,000 to build again excluding land costs.

Back then to go to a 4 bedroom and separate dining I was looking at $20,000 (which I should have done in hindsight) extra so in today’s terms using the method above that would be $40,000.

So using some real figures and some thought I would say the cost to build a standard 4 bedroom house, materials and wages would be in the order of $250,000 to $300,000 excluding land.

Now looking around at land prices and the cost of brand new houses, I reckon I am pretty much on the money with these figures.

So where did your figure of $250k for labour alone come from?

Incomes in the macro may have doubled, but what trades charge for labour on jobs is MUCH higher than that (at least triple). My figure comes from experience in building and renovating over the past 15 years.

And yes, I use terms like ‘probably’ because I don’t have a crystal ball. My opinion, and those of other posters, are just that – opinions.

Now, I’ve always been cognisant of the risk of a significant fall, so I tend to focus on buying properties that have reasonable to good yield, and properties where I can improve the yield (e.g. through renovating). This has led to a situation where my property portfolio generates significantly more cash than it costs to hold, so short term fluctuations don’t really matter. The loans have all been written in nominal amounts from the past, so inflation helps me in real terms. Eventually I’ll just live off the income the properties generate; I have no real need or compelling reason to sell. This is why short term changes don’t worry me.

A quick look on Allhomes has new four bedder houses on a land rent scheme (so the build price, not including land as that is a separate transaction) at around the 250 – 350k mark. So that is materials, labour and whatever markups the developer feels that they can reasonably (or sometimes unreasonably) extract from us poor punters.

JC said :

So using some real figures and some thought I would say the cost to build a standard 4 bedroom house, materials and wages would be in the order of $250,000 to $300,000 excluding land.

These days, you need to comply with the current building regulations – so things like double glazed, thermally broken windows (which are significantly more expensive than single glazed aluminium framed windows you could have used 13 years ago), mandatory rainwater tank with a percentage of the roof to drain to it, higher R value insulation, energy efficient LED lighting, water efficient showerheads and applicances, all add to the cost. I don’t believe you can take the cost from 13 years ago and just extrapolate linearly for inflation. Of course, the higher capital cost results in lower running utility costs and a higher resale value for the house. But the point is, you can’t choose to build a cheap house with single glazed windows, no insulation, 2-star Dishwasher, etc. like you could 13 years ago – the current rules don’t allow it.

If you talk to builders or anyone who’s built recently, I suspect you’ll find that the cost to build a standard 4 bedroom house, materials and wages would be in the order of $400,000 to $450,000 excluding land. Maybe closer to $500,000 if you go for a better finish with stone benchtops, quality door handles and tiles, etc.

shauno said :

My house price can go down to zero as far as im concerned because I dont have any intention to sell.

That’s pretty much how I feel about my own home too.

My house price can go down to zero as far as im concerned because I dont have any intention to sell.

JC said :

milkman said :

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

Interesting you use the word probably, meaning of course you don’t really know. Now I don’t know the cost of labour either, but I do know what it cost me to build my house 13 years ago. That cost was $100,000 for a standard 3 bedroom house, excluding land, stamp duty etc.

Now 13 years was a long time ago, but wages have more than doubled in that time and the cost of materials doubled too. So my house would probably (again like you I don’t really know) cost $200,000-$250,000 to build again excluding land costs.

Back then to go to a 4 bedroom and separate dining I was looking at $20,000 (which I should have done in hindsight) extra so in today’s terms using the method above that would be $40,000.

So using some real figures and some thought I would say the cost to build a standard 4 bedroom house, materials and wages would be in the order of $250,000 to $300,000 excluding land.

Now looking around at land prices and the cost of brand new houses, I reckon I am pretty much on the money with these figures.

So where did your figure of $250k for labour alone come from?

Incomes in the macro may have doubled, but what trades charge for labour on jobs is MUCH higher than that (at least triple). My figure comes from experience in building and renovating over the past 15 years.

And yes, I use terms like ‘probably’ because I don’t have a crystal ball. My opinion, and those of other posters, are just that – opinions.

Now, I’ve always been cognisant of the risk of a significant fall, so I tend to focus on buying properties that have reasonable to good yield, and properties where I can improve the yield (e.g. through renovating). This has led to a situation where my property portfolio generates significantly more cash than it costs to hold, so short term fluctuations don’t really matter. The loans have all been written in nominal amounts from the past, so inflation helps me in real terms. Eventually I’ll just live off the income the properties generate; I have no real need or compelling reason to sell. This is why short term changes don’t worry me.

OpenYourMind10:54 am 03 Nov 13

I always get the impression when reading RiotACT posts on this topic that there’s a group of people that imagine impossibly cheap ‘affordable’ housing. They seem to lament the $50,000 house of yesteryear, but don’t seem to yearn for $10k per annum salaries to go with the old house prices.

milkman said :

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

Interesting you use the word probably, meaning of course you don’t really know. Now I don’t know the cost of labour either, but I do know what it cost me to build my house 13 years ago. That cost was $100,000 for a standard 3 bedroom house, excluding land, stamp duty etc.

Now 13 years was a long time ago, but wages have more than doubled in that time and the cost of materials doubled too. So my house would probably (again like you I don’t really know) cost $200,000-$250,000 to build again excluding land costs.

Back then to go to a 4 bedroom and separate dining I was looking at $20,000 (which I should have done in hindsight) extra so in today’s terms using the method above that would be $40,000.

So using some real figures and some thought I would say the cost to build a standard 4 bedroom house, materials and wages would be in the order of $250,000 to $300,000 excluding land.

Now looking around at land prices and the cost of brand new houses, I reckon I am pretty much on the money with these figures.

So where did your figure of $250k for labour alone come from?

Arescarti: I do enjoy our debates here, we have such differing opinions.

First, I’d suggets that if you think property returns less than money in the bank, you obviously don’t know how to choose an investment property. They aren’t all the same, you know, and there are investors (like me) who are actually quite interested in yield and yield growth, and have specific strategies to increase yield.

Also, if you think the labour and materials for a modern 4 bedroom house are less than $250, I’d invite you to speak to a few builders.

California and Florida are also interesting cases, but I wonder about things like their median incomes, including the illegals who ilve there. Both these states have a lot of poverty, especially when compared with ACT.

Oh, and quoting articles from what is possibly the famous property bear site in Australia won’t make me change my mind.

I don’t believe land is constrained in ACT, but Canberrans are well know location snobs and demand for inner suburbs will probably stay high.

Finally, I wouldn’t see 5-8% as a crash. This is due in part to the quality of a lot of the stock on market (including newly built stock, much of which is rubbish), and partly due to the prices I have, and do, pay when buying. If property was to fall, say, 10%, I won’t be crying, I’ll be out buying more. People need to live somewhere, and in a town which (long term) will have an educated and well paid workforce I think property is probably the asset class with the most reliable returns, provided you know how to choose!

milkman said :

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

“A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to its investors from their own money or the money paid by subsequent investors, rather than from profit earned by the individual or organization running the operation.”

This is exactly how housing investment works, except that it isn’t fraudulent. The net rental return on investment property is now less than what you’d get by just putting the money in the bank. Investors aren’t investing in the underlying income generating potential of the asset, it’s purely speculative. The only way that property investors can turn a profit on their ‘investment’ is if new entrants to the market are willing to pay ever increasing amounts of money (in real terms) for their investment. That’s how a ponzi scheme works. Once you run out of debt to keep inflating prices or suckers to keep buying investments, the scheme falls apart.

I agree that adding new supply is expensive, but they’re not physical, underlying costs, they’re all constructed. The labour and materials for a modern 3-4 bedroom home are well under $250k, it’s the taxes, charges and land that make it expensive. If taxes, land release and planning laws were the same as they were 20 years ago, there’s no reason at all a modest new house and land package couldn’t cost $250-300k.

milkman said :

Canberra has plenty of expensive units (most of which still seem to sell), but when it comes to houses we are under supplied, and current prices don’t justify building more stock despite our population trending up. This puts a floor under house prices in the longer term.

The whole “demand is high and supply is constrained, so price falls will be contained” idea is a fundamentally and demonstrably flawed concept that has been a feature of property bubbles the world over.

Constrained supply causes volatility, prices rise quickly as demand increases, and fall just as quickly when demand falls. Demand for housing and household size is also far more elastic than it is assumed to be.

http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2013/02/mb-presentation-housing-supply-price-volatility/
http://www.bowdoin.edu/~ytang/Huang-Tang-Aug-2011.pdf

California and Florida both had reportedly horrendous housing supply shortages and massive population growth. When the ass fell out of the US economy, employment tanked and household size rose dramatically, demand evaporated, prices crashed and they were left with a huge housing oversupply.

Sydney is perhaps the only place in Australia that has a fundamental and underlying deficiency of dwelling supply.

milkman said :

Yes, Canberra house prices are softening, but a major crash in nominal terms? I very much doubt it.

I guess it depends what you consider a “major” crash.

SQM expects Canberra to be down 3-6% in nominal terms this year, and their base case is down 1-4% for 2014. Their weaker scenario is 5-8% nominal falls.

And SQM is a mainstream forecaster making far more optimistic assumptions than the likes of me.

milkman said :

arescarti42 said :

milkman said :

PantsMan said :

Can’t wait for $250k per annum household Canberra commie public servants to now, after having enjoyed the capitalist up-swing, demand the government socialise their losses.

Isn’t going to happen.

I have total faith in our spineless self interested elected officials to completely ruin the economic future of today’s youth and future generations by throwing everything they’ve got on the housing debt ponzi bonfire.

Just look at what happened in the US and Europe when the SHTF. They wasted trillions trying to prop the system up, burdening future generations with crushing debt.

Admittedly when efforts to keep the party going inevitably fail, you can just about guarantee the only losses that will be socialised will be those of the banks.

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

Canberra has plenty of expensive units (most of which still seem to sell), but when it comes to houses we are under supplied, and current prices don’t justify building more stock despite our population trending up. This puts a floor under house prices in the longer term.

The real wildcard is whether the fed government decides to trim the PS back. If they have a decent go at this, prices will drop, for a time. But the other fundamentals are still in place. Canberra has crap infrastructure for getting in from outer suburbs (and the schools out there are none too flash either), building costs are rising (despite tradies being under utilised), land is EXPENSIVE here, and new developments incur a lot of tax (of various types).

If I were buying (and I might buy another 1 or 2 in the next couple of years) I’d be hunting for well located bargains that need work, and taking advantage of the fact that many tradies are short on work and would be willing to negotiate prices to renovate up to a better standard in a good location. Still expensive, but an effectiive way to get into a nice property and generate some equity as you go.

Yes, Canberra house prices are softening, but a major crash in nominal terms? I very much doubt it.

$250,000 of labour costs can be reduced by more efficient building techniques, better supply chain, cheaper wages.
Not saying that’s going to happen here, but it’s happened elsewhere when it was thought to be nigh on impossible.

arescarti42 said :

milkman said :

PantsMan said :

Can’t wait for $250k per annum household Canberra commie public servants to now, after having enjoyed the capitalist up-swing, demand the government socialise their losses.

Isn’t going to happen.

I have total faith in our spineless self interested elected officials to completely ruin the economic future of today’s youth and future generations by throwing everything they’ve got on the housing debt ponzi bonfire.

Just look at what happened in the US and Europe when the SHTF. They wasted trillions trying to prop the system up, burdening future generations with crushing debt.

Admittedly when efforts to keep the party going inevitably fail, you can just about guarantee the only losses that will be socialised will be those of the banks.

It’s always nice to bring up conspiracy theories and throw around terms like ponzi, but the simple reality is that there is probably $250k of labour alone in a new 4 bedroom house. You’ve also got land development costs, building materials and everyone in the development chain getting their slice of profit.

Canberra has plenty of expensive units (most of which still seem to sell), but when it comes to houses we are under supplied, and current prices don’t justify building more stock despite our population trending up. This puts a floor under house prices in the longer term.

The real wildcard is whether the fed government decides to trim the PS back. If they have a decent go at this, prices will drop, for a time. But the other fundamentals are still in place. Canberra has crap infrastructure for getting in from outer suburbs (and the schools out there are none too flash either), building costs are rising (despite tradies being under utilised), land is EXPENSIVE here, and new developments incur a lot of tax (of various types).

If I were buying (and I might buy another 1 or 2 in the next couple of years) I’d be hunting for well located bargains that need work, and taking advantage of the fact that many tradies are short on work and would be willing to negotiate prices to renovate up to a better standard in a good location. Still expensive, but an effectiive way to get into a nice property and generate some equity as you go.

Yes, Canberra house prices are softening, but a major crash in nominal terms? I very much doubt it.

milkman said :

PantsMan said :

Can’t wait for $250k per annum household Canberra commie public servants to now, after having enjoyed the capitalist up-swing, demand the government socialise their losses.

Isn’t going to happen.

I have total faith in our spineless self interested elected officials to completely ruin the economic future of today’s youth and future generations by throwing everything they’ve got on the housing debt ponzi bonfire.

Just look at what happened in the US and Europe when the SHTF. They wasted trillions trying to prop the system up, burdening future generations with crushing debt.

Admittedly when efforts to keep the party going inevitably fail, you can just about guarantee the only losses that will be socialised will be those of the banks.

PantsMan said :

Can’t wait for $250k per annum household Canberra commie public servants to now, after having enjoyed the capitalist up-swing, demand the government socialise their losses.

Isn’t going to happen.

Can’t wait for $250k per annum household Canberra commie public servants to now, after having enjoyed the capitalist up-swing, demand the government socialise their losses.

neanderthalsis1:49 pm 02 Nov 13

Shall we call this a win for Andrew Barr’s affordable housing policies?

Rather ironic that success for the Housing affordability comes not from any grand land rent rort or other half baked policy, but from simply reducing demand thanks to our PM and his grand plans for a leaner, meaner APS.

milkman said :

Right now I’d say any time during the next year will be a good time to buy. Depending on what happens with the Fed budget next May, we may even have a couple of years of buyers market.

Just be careful, though, because as the market has softened due to big scary PS cuts, it will spring right back when the scare is over. The other fundamentals, like land price, cost of building and cost of finance have not changed.

Yes but there’s a good chance by the time the local APS pain stops (in a couple of years) the rates cycle etc. will have shifted. Hopefully the next couple of years will shake some of the parasites lose from from ACT real estate industry.

Right now I’d say any time during the next year will be a good time to buy. Depending on what happens with the Fed budget next May, we may even have a couple of years of buyers market.

Just be careful, though, because as the market has softened due to big scary PS cuts, it will spring right back when the scare is over. The other fundamentals, like land price, cost of building and cost of finance have not changed.

HiddenDragon12:43 am 02 Nov 13

Before we know it, the VFT will make us a commuter suburb of Sydney, but in the meantime there may, just, be some long overdue good news for renters and first home buyers (and, of course, brave speculators, er, I mean investors).

Excellent news. Keep going!

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