01/04/2025 09:28:52
Dr Shane Oliver, Chief Economist and Head of Investment Strategy at AMP, discusses home prices.
The key points are:
After 4.9% growth last year, we expect average property prices to rise around 3% this year.
Home prices rose again in March
CoreLogic data shows that national average property prices rose again in March, with buyer sentiment supported by the RBA’s rate cut in late February.
Source: CoreLogic
All cities saw price gains except Hobart, with the recent losers of Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney continuing to pick up. Interestingly the booming cities of the last two years are mixed with Adelaide still seeing very strong gains (although they have been getting revised down), Brisbane recording modest growth and revised data for Perth now showing it to have seen falls in prices after a peak last October and now seeing weak gains.
Source: CoreLogic, AMP
Expect further modest gains in average property prices
Further gains are likely as interest rates fall further and the shortage of property remains, provided unemployment remains relatively low.
Source: RBA, CoreLogic, AMP
However, the upswing it likely to be modest
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: ABS, CoreLogic, AMP
So just as the downswing in property prices was modest, the upswing is likely to be modest too. After 4.8% growth last year, we expect average property prices to rise around 3% this year.
What about the election? Don’t expect much impact
Using CoreLogic data since 1980, residential property prices have risen 7.7% pa under Coalition governments and 4.5% pa under Labor. That said, policies with respect to housing have not been particularly different under both sides of politics.
During the election campaign it’s likely that uncertainty as to the outcome may weigh on buyer demand keeping sales and auction clearance rates below average levels. But the impact is likely to be marginal as the Coalition is not offering a radical change in housing policies, unlike say Labor in the 2019 election where it’s proposed changes to curtail negative gearing and halve the capital gains tax discount could have cut average prices by 5-10%.
Both sides of politics are now offering a mix of demand side and supply side policies. On the demand side Labor has a Help to Buy Scheme with 10,000 places a year which will see the Government take a 40% equity stake and the Coalition will allow first home buyers to access $50,000 of their super. Both may be good for the lucky few who get in early but ultimately will just lead to higher home prices – which is great for existing homeowners but not much else. On the supply side, Labor is focussed on trying to build 1.2 million new homes under the Housing Accord through incentives with the states and a Housing Australia Fund to supply 30,000 social and affordable homes. The Coalition promises to invest $5bn in housing infrastructure and cut permanent migration by 25% or 45,000 places. Both have merit but it’s not clear which one will be most effective in boosting supply.
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.
Ends