Australian home prices turning back up again

03/03/2025 13:30:00


Dr Shane Oliver, Head of Investment Strategy & Chief Economist at AMP, discusses home prices.

The key points are:

Home prices turned back up again in February

After a brief downswing, national average property prices hooked back up in February, reflecting the anticipation and then reality of the RBA starting to cut rates. Most cities saw gains between 0.2%mom to 0.4%mom with the recent losers of Melbourne, Hobart, Canberra and Sydney picking up as the booming cities of the last two years – Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth – continue to slow as poor affordability impacts them.



Source: CoreLogic

The downswing just saw a 0.4% fall in national average prices spread over 3 months, with falls in Hobart, Canberra, Melbourne, Darwin and Sydney partly offset by continued gains in Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and regional areas.



Source: CoreLogic, AMP

Expect further gains in average property prices

Further gains are likely as interest rates fall further and the shortage of property remains, provided unemployment doesn’t rise too far. The upswing is likely to be more apparent through the second half as we see more rate cuts.

Source: RBA, CoreLogic, AMP


Source: ABS, AMP

Modest downswing = likely modest upswing

Just as the downswing was mild the upswing is likely to be too. This is because it’s starting from a point of still poor affordability, interest rates are only likely to fall modestly, and population growth is slowing.

Source: CoreLogic, AMP


Source: ABS, CoreLogic, AMPSo just as the downswing in property prices was modest, the upswing is likely to be modest too. After 4.9% growth last year, we expect average property prices to rise around 3% this year with the upswing becoming more noticeable in the second half.

Auction clearance rates are up from their lows late last year but are running around average levels or a bit below consistent with a gradual recovery in the property market.



Source: Domain, AMP

What to watch?

The key things to watch will be interest rates, unemployment and population growth. For example, a return to RBA rate hikes or less cuts than we are forecasting, a sharply rising trend in unemployment and a sharp slowing in net migration could result in a resumption of property price falls reflecting the divergence between home buyers’ capacity to pay and current home price levels. On the flipside a faster fall in rates on the back of weaker than expected inflation could drive a stronger upswing in property prices. And of course, Australian home prices have had a tendency to surprise economists (like me) and many others on the upside over the last few decades!


Ends
 
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