Friday, October 26, 2012

Banks unwilling to finance new residential projects


The banks have come under attack for their unwillingness to finance the development of new residential projects in Sydney and are potentially holding back the recovery of the new housing market, says BIS Shrapnel managing director Robert Mellor.Speaking at the recent QBE LMI Housing Outlook breakfast, Mellor said developers had been telling BIS Shrapnel that a more favourable planning attitude had been adopted by the O'Farrell state government, ahead of changes to the planning regime next year. "We are hearing from developers that the state government has changed its attitude significantly," said Mellor."The sorts of comments I am hearing is that the government is far more accommodative even without the new regime in place and that's a favourable thing for new construction."But he said the most important thing needed to stimulate a recovery was "the banks freeing up their attitude to lending practices"."My personal view is that banks are being very tough on developers and very tough on individual borrowers."There is this perception [among the banks] that housing could still fall through the floor like it has done in other parts of the world."They need to realise that everything has been thrown at this sector over the last three to four years – it will be nine years since the boom ended coming up this Christmas."You can't talk about prices being massively overvalued when we have seen significant correction in prices, and in real terms they have declined around 12%."Mellor says while it is more still relatively more expensive to build in Sydney, there will be a recovery in construction on Sydney fringes. However, he says the substantial recovery will need to come in medium density and high density construction because the old days of relying on owner occupiers building new houses are over. "You need investors. "We have a favourable regime, but the problem is if banks take a negative attitude on that, then it will be held back. "If that's the case there is the risk of asset price inflation – you need more supply. "The banks have a part to play in that, whether it's funding fringe development or supporting high-rise development. "People need to realise there is no oversupply risk and no collapse about to come."

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Buyer beware


The New South Wales consumer watchdog is warning prospective home buyers and renters of scams which are costing unsuspecting victims thousands of dollars.Legitimate ads on reputable property websites are being copied onto dodgy sites with homes and apartments being offered at cut-price deals.In one ad, a two-bedroom property in Sydney valued at $1,300 a week was being offered for a third of the price.Consumers are asked to pay a deposit into a Western Union account without seeing the property.They then lost their money.The Commissioner for Fair Trading, Rod Stowe, says overseas students and people looking for a bargain tend to be the victims.Mr Stowe says some of the ads claim a quick sale is required, or that the property's tenant is overseas."Usually [there are] very convincing stories given as to why the properties are being sold at a particularly discounted rate," he said."Be very cautious. If it sounds too good to be true it usually is."New real estate fraud prevention guidelines have been released to combat the problem.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Australia's most expensive houses


If you want to know where Australia’s rich live, it will probably come as no surprise that Sydney tops the list.Perth and Melbourne are a distant second and third behind the harbour city which has 19 of Australia's most expensive 25 suburbs, according to the RP Data. Perth has three, Melbourne two and Eagle Bay in Western Australia's Margaret River region also gets a top 25 ranking.As in most parts of the world our rich tend to live close to the center of town and if not close to the water.Why? Because the rich can afford the convenience.Sydney’s Point Piper, around 4 kilometres form the CBD tops the list with a median value of $7.382 million.With only 11 streets, including the richest in Australia - Wolseley Road – it has only 148 detached houses and 57 percent of them are owned outright (that is without a mortgage).Not surprisingly Point Piper residents have the highest average incomes in the nation, averaging just over $182,000.Second on the list of expensive suburbs, with an average home price of $6.5 million, is Watson's Bay, only seven kilometres away from Sydney’s city center. In third place is Centennial Park, followed by Woolwich - both in Sydney.Perth's Peppermint Grove takes fifth spot, where median values are $4.3 million, while a typical mansion in Toorak, Melbourne’s top suburb, a can be bought for a measly $2.8 million.Tim Lawless, research director for RPData said suburbs on the property rich list tended be in areas near the central business district, close to the water, or featured houses with a heritage value or houses perched on larger blocks of land.Only three of the top 25 most expensive suburbs are further than 10 kilometres from the capital city central business district.It’s no coincidence that the population living in these most expensive 25 suburbs accounts for just 0.5 per cent of Australia's total population.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

State of the property market


In Australia there’s not one property market. Each state is at it’s own stage of the property cycle and each has multiple markets segmented geographically, by type of property and by price point.
Apartments are performing better than houses, luxury homes are not performing as well as median price properties and regional properties are in general underperforming capital city dwellings.
However, there are opportunities in every market...
Remember, you are not buying “the market.” As a strategic investor you would be buying an individual property in that market that you would be happy to hold in your portfolio in the long term and one that was bought sufficiently below intrinsic value so that even if the market fell a bit further, you would still have bought well.

CAPITAL CITIES


Sydney
While the overall market in Sydney has been flat over the last year, with median house prices down by around 1%, there's growing confidence in the harbour city.
After languishing for some years, the top end of the market is showing early signs of increasing demand, especially in the eastern and lower north shore suburbs.
While there is also increasing demand for houses in the middle and lower end of the market, over the last few years Sydney’s apartment market has outperformed the housing market with stronger rental and capital growth.
A good example of this is the strong demand from owner-occupiers for units in Sydney’s Inner West. A shortage of available “good” stock relative to demand is pushing up prices in these suburbs, which are going through gentrification.
Apartments in Sydney’s eastern, beachside suburbs and lower north shore suburbs are also performing well. However, buyers are being very selective and avoiding properties that are overpriced or apartments in secondary locations.
Strong rental demand, a shortage of rental properties, tightening vacancies and rising rents means investors will vie for the same apartments as owner-occupiers, underpinning prices.
The market for well-located apartments is likely to remain strong throughout Spring and this will be helped if interest rates fall once more as expected.
Melbourne
After falling in value over the first quarter of the year, the Melbourne housing market has been a bit of a surprise, performing better than many expected with prices rising around 3% over the last quarter clawing back half of their losses.
Again different segments of the market are at different stages of the property cycle.
Builders and developers have gotten ahead of themselves and there is a substantial oversupply of newly built house and land packages in the outer suburbs, especially in the west and the north. This will create downward pressure on property values in these locations and for properties in the first-home buyer category in general.
The top end of Melbourne’s property market is still quiet with an oversupply of property relative to the reduced demand for luxury property, however there is more demand for properties priced between $500,000 and $900,000 in the inner- and middle-ring suburbs of Melbourne.
With too many new apartment projects under construction there is an oversupply of CBD and near city apartments at a time when there is less demand. This will put downward pressure on prices and rentals for apartments, yet interestingly Residex reports that house rents in Melbourne increased by 10.53% in the past year.
Many of the apartments that have been sold off the plan are coming on stream over the next few years and have been purchased by investors. Some will have difficulty getting finance and settling their purchase.
Others will be disappointed to see the end value of their properties is less than their purchase price.
This oversupply apartments will overhang the Melbourne market for a few years, causing prices to fall slightly.
However established apartments with an element of scarcity, for example Art Deco features, are still selling well, as there is limited supply in relation to the current demand for these types of properties in Melbourne’s bayside, eastern and south eastern suburbs.
On the whole though, I expect the Melbourne market to remain subdued for a while but, as in every market, there are some great buying opportunities, especially for properties to which you can add value through renovations and manufacture capital growth.
Brisbane
After a number of tough years Brisbane median house prices fell 0.60 per cent and unit prices fell 0.61 per cent over the last year according to Residex and is now hovering near the bottom of its cycle.
Buyers are lacking confidence to re-enter the market and are sitting on the sidelines waiting for signs that the market has bottomed before they make a purchase. Many were waiting for the resources boom to reignite their property market, but recent negative media has dampened their confidence.
However we’re seeing more strategic investors getting a foothold in the Brisbane market recognizing that it’s a “buyers market” and taking advantage of counter-cyclical opportunities.
There is an oversupply of apartments in the Brisbane CBD and surrounding suburbs with over 40 projects currently being marketed. Many of these apartments will remain unsold and this oversupply of properties will put downward pressure on prices and rentals.
The Brisbane detached house market is still languishing but on the way to bottoming out. House prices have dropped for the last few years in Brisbane but there are signs that the inner and middle-ring Brisbane home market is picking up with more buyers returning and many properties now selling under multi-offer scenarios.
All this means that Brisbane is entering the stabilisation phase of its property cycle, but prices are unlikely to start rising until 2013.
The good news for property investors is that house rents in Brisbane increased by 14.47 per cent in the past year.
Perth
The Perth property market, which has been in a slump for the last 5 years, appears to be moving again with median house prices increasing by 3.17 per cent and apartments by 10.05 per cent over the last year according to Residex.
All the fundamentals are positive - Western Australia has Australia's strongest economy, lowest unemployment rate and highest wages. Rents for both units and houses are rising and there is an increasing a shortage of accommodation for the increasing number of buyers and tenants
It’s the old supply and demand ratio at play. Population growth is strong and and levels of construction have been low for the last few years, so the cycle is moving on. And so are rentals. According to Residex house rents in Perth increased by 16.46 per cent in the past year.
Adelaide
The Adelaide property markets are flat at present. Median house prices fell 2.45 per cent and unit prices fell 2.1 per cent over the last year and median rents remained steady according to Residex.
Since the announcement of postponing any additions to the Olympic Dam project, confidence is waning as many locals were hoping this project would turn South Australia into the next big mining state. Unfortunately there is nothing in the wings to suggest this market will change in the near future.
Darwin
Darwin’s property markets have performed well with median house prices increasing by 3.37 per cent and unit prices by 5.95 per cent over the last year according to Residex.
Darwin’s market tends to be volatile and seasonal but is underpinned by increased activity in the resources sector, especially offshore resources.
Canberra
Median house prices in the ACT fell 0.26 per cent and unit prices fell 5.47 per cent over the last year according to Residex.
But the market may be turning as Canberra has low unemployment, relatively high public service incomes and a shortage of accommodation, especially at the cheaper end of the market.
Hobart
Residex reports that median house prices in the Hobart fell 6.36 per cent and unit prices fell 6.68 per cent over the last year and that median house rents did not increase.
While the Hobart property market has performed relatively well over the longer term, a weaker economy that lacks exposure to the mainland's resources boom and its relative isolation suggests there are better places to invest in property.
In summary:
Looking at the Australian property markets I see the glass being half full, while I know a lot of people see it half empty.
There are some excellent property investment opportunities for long term investors. If you have a secure job and the ability to service a loan, and that’s become much easier recently, now is the time to consider buying a well located residential investment property.


Thursday, September 6, 2012

Australia's economic stance



Driven by the biggest resource-investment boom since the 19th century, Australia’s $1.379 trillion economy will probably overtake Spain’s $1.386 trillion GDP this quarter, data from Bloomberg shows. 

While the European nation of some 47 million people struggles to disentangle itself from the debt problems of its region, Australia’s economy grew at 3.7 per cent in the three months to June from a year earlier.

As most of the developed world struggles with high unemployment and debt, Australia’s unemployment remains steady at 5 per cent and has not suffered a recession in 21 consecutive years. 

“This is a nice microcosm of the structural shifts in the global economy away from the old developed core to the emerging and peripheral part of the global economy, in Asia particularly,” said Richard Yetsenga, head of global markets research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. (ANZ)

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

RBA cut

The Reserve Bank has cut its cash rate by 25 basis points, to 3.5 per cent - its lowest level since November 2009. Today's decision marks the biggest back-to-back monthly reduction since the depth of the global financial crisis.

Residex CEO, John Edwards said he was disappointed with today's outcome and that he believes The Reserve should have held its position.

"The ultimate outcome of the global difficulties which are currently unfolding could well be that the Reserve Bank will need as much ammunition as possible available to it in order to maintain Australian resilience in a potentially very difficult global economy. The need for this is even more acute in a situation where the Federal Government is failing to recognise the potentially very poor timing of its new taxes and impost which are about to come into play.”

Mr. Edwards went on to say that small cuts such as the one annouced today can get overlooked in the consumer’s perception of market conditions and ultimately have little to no impact.

"This can simply work to the negative by further undermining confidence given the very wide-spread press about difficult global finances. The size of today's rate cut is such that a lot of it will probably get lost in the bankers needs to maintain margins and their stability. Funding margins in the current global finance market will be being impacted on as markets look to reduce risk exposure, particularly in Europe.”

Overall, Mr. Edwards said he would have preferred a significant reduction in July if needed when the outcome of the Greek situation is understood and known.

”A single, significant reduction of 0.5 to 0.75 per cent later in the year would have a guaranteed outcome at the consumers 'gate' once the Banks have also balanced their position.”

Monday, June 4, 2012

Wage increases by 2.9%

On Friday 1 June 2012 Fair Work Australia handed down its 2012 annual wage review decision.
– All Modern Award rates of pay are increased by 2.9% effective from the first full pay period commencing on or after (ffppooa) 1 July 2012.
– This increase can be absorbed into any existing over award payments (check the absorption clause in your Modern Awards).
– If you are transitioning rates of pay to the Modern Award, an employee’s new minimum rate is his/her new Modern Award rate plus or minus 40% of the transitional amount.
– Award free casual employees – the default casual loading has increased from 22% to 23% effective from the first full pay period commencing on or after 1 July 2012.
 
Summary of Decision
The 2.9% increase raises the adult National Minimum Wage to $606.40 per week (an increase of $17.10 per week) and to $15.96 per hour (an increase of $0.45 per hour). The National Minimum Wages for employees under training arrangements, juniors and employees with a disability have also been increased by 2.9%.
The minimum weekly payment for employees on the Supported Wage System (currently $75) has not been increased by this decision but can be expected to be increased before the 1 July operative date. Any increase will be advised to members. Adult award rates were also increased by 2.9% at all classification levels, with weekly wages rounded to the nearest $0.10. This decision applies to all employers whose operations or employees are covered by Modern Awards, Enterprise Awards and NAPSAs, all transitional APCSs, and award free employees.
 
Key Features of the Decision
1. Modern Awards
All Modern Award adult rates of pay are increased by 2.9% effective from the first full pay period commencing on or after 1 July 2012.
For many employees, the annual wage review increases coincide with the third transitional step into the Modern Award which also applies from ffppooa 1 July. Subject to the operation of the transitional arrangements, Modern Award classification rates are the minimum award classification rate that can be paid under an award or agreement. In some cases this may require increases ffppooa 1 July to bring an employee’s rate up to the new Modern Award or transitional rate.

Minimum wages for juniors, employees under training arrangements, employees with a disability, piece rates and the National Training Wage
Most junior and apprentice rates are expressed as a percentage of an identified adult classification rate and the annual wage review increase is passed on to juniors in this way. The 2.9% increase applies to all levels of the National Training Wage Schedule which is in most Modern Awards.
Where juniors, apprentices or trainees not under a National Training Wage are phasing into the Modern Award the rules to increase their rates in the pay scale or transitional award should be followed.
Piece rates increase in accordance with the relevant provisions in the Modern Award and pay scale or transitional award.

2. Award-free employees
Award-free adult employees are covered by the National Minimum Wage. This was increased by $17.10 to $606.40 (or $15.96 ph) ffppooa 1 July.
Award-free casuals are covered by the default casual loading unless there is an agreement covering them. The default casual loading will be increased from 22% to 23% ffppooa 1 July.
Special national minimum wages for award/agreement free junior employees
The 2011 Annual Wage Review adopted the junior wage percentage scale in the Miscellaneous Award 2010, applied to the national minimum wage, as the special national minimum wage for award/agreement free junior employees. This scale will continue to apply to these employees.

Special national minimum wages for award/agreement free employees to whom training arrangements apply
The 2011 Annual Wage Review adopted the provisions of the Miscellaneous Award 2010 as the basis for award/agreement free employees to whom training arrangements apply. The apprentice provisions in that award and the provisions of the National Training Wage Schedule were incorporated into the National Minimum Wage order. Adult apprentices should not receive less that the National Minimum Wage for adults.

The wage decision and transitional provisions
Many Modern Awards have transitional provisions phasing-in the award’s classification rates and penalties or loadings. The next phase-in step for penalties and loadings also applies from ffppooa 1 July 2012.
The difference between the pay rate for the employee’s classification in the old pay scale or transitional award and the appropriate classification in the Modern Award is called the “transitional amount”. Similarly, the differences between penalties and loadings (including the casual loading) in the old pay scale, NAPSA or transitional award and the corresponding penalty or loading in the Modern Award are called the “transitional percentage”.
From fppooa 1 July 2012 the third stage of phasing starts in Modern Awards with standard transitional provisions (most Modern Awards).
This means employers must pay the modern award rate (including the 2.9% increase) +/- 40% of the transitional amount (depending on whether your pre-modern award was higher or lower than the modern award rate). Employers must also pay the relevant penalties and loadings +/- the 40% of the relevant transitional percentage.
The decision does not change the size of the transitional amount, just the modern award rate that the transitional amount affects. Nor does the decision alter the percentages of the modern award penalties or loadings. The move from +/- 60% to +/- 40% of the transitional percentages at the same time as the annual wage review increases follows from the Modern Award transitional provisions.
 
Further Information
New pay schedules for each modern award reflecting the increases advised above will be forwarded in due course to members receiving the Chamber’s industrial awards service. This year, for the first time, the pay schedules will be sent via email rather than post unless you have elected not to receive email correspondence.
If you have further questions regarding how this decision affects transitional arrangements under a Modern Award please contact the Workplace Advice Unit.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Construction industry woes

The construction industry downturn continues, after Sydney-based building group St Hilliers Construction announced on May 16 it had been placed in voluntary administration because its funding had run out.
The construction industry has suffered some of the highest insolvency rates when compared to other sectors, with the continued downturn in home building adding to the turmoil.
The collapse also comes as building experts say it will take a few months for interest rate cuts to flow through to SMEs.
St Hilliers Construction, which is the construction arm of the St Hilliers Group, announced it had appointed Trent Hancock and Michael Hird of Moore Stephens as voluntary administrators. Both were contacted this morning, but a reply was not available prior to publication.
The company employs about 350 people.
The business said in a statement this morning that an appointment wouldn't affect the St Hilliers Property group, which is responsible for funds management and property development.
However, it did say that an associated company, St Hilliers Ararat, is part of a consortium contracted to help build the $350 million expansion of Ararat Prison.
St Hilliers Ararat has now been placed in liquidation, and St Hilliers Construction is in voluntary administration due to its exposure under guarantees for St Hilliers Ararat's debt.
"Negotiations over several months between the Ararat Prison equity investors and its bankers in conjunction with the State of Victoria have failed to reach a definitive agreement for additional funding of approximately $150 million," it said.
The company said it could not allow debts to be incurred without sufficient funding and, as a result, it needs to stop work on the Ararat project and place the company into voluntary administration.
Executive chairman Tim Casey said in a statement the action was "very regrettable".
"We have over a number of months explored and exhausted all possible avenues to recapitalise the construction business and find a solution to the significant cost and time overruns on the Ararat Project. Unfortunately a solution was not possible under the current regime."
"We will now work actively and constructively with the administrator and all stakeholders to continue all viable projects and to find a way to restructure the construction business going forward. For the rest of the St Hilliers Group it remains business as usual."

Friday, May 11, 2012

10 whacky projects that survived Swan’s big axe.

Treasurer Wayne Swan’s Budget might have grabbed the headlines for more than $32 billion worth of cuts and savings, but there was still plenty of money for programs and initiatives that are a little unusual.
SmartCompany has scoured the budget papers to find 10 whacky projects that survived Swan’s big axe. While we know these projects are very important for the people involved, and many are quite worth, they still raise a few eyebrows:

1. Slim Dusty statue

The Government will put $30,000 towards the erection of a statue of Slim Dusty and Joy McKean in the country music capital of Australia, Tamworth.

2. Parliament House Walk

There’s $100,000 to conduct a feasibility study into the establishment of a Parliament House Walk from Canberra’s iconic building to its Civic Centre.

3. Cricket under lights in Canberra

Australia’s federal pollies clearly want to get down on a few day/night cricket games in the nation’s capital – the Government will spend $2.5 million as a contribution towards putting up lights at Manuka Oval.

4. Filming The Wolverine

This was one announced before the budget, but it bears repeating. The Government will stump up $12.8 million to attract production of the film The Wolverine to Australia. Hopefully the Prime Minister gets front row seats at the premiere for that sort of dosh.

5. Hosting the G20 meeting

You know those G20 meetings that are good for photo opportunities and not much else? Well, Australia will host one in 2014 and we’ll spend a staggering $326.9 million over the next four years to do so.

6. A right royal scholarship

The 60th anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth II will be marked with the spending of $400,000 over four year to establish a special scholarship for female leaders. Very worthy, but I’m sure a bunch of flowers for Her Majesty would have been much cheaper.

7. Weather ads

The Bureau of Meteorology will score $300,000 to conduct a trial of running advertising on its website. Apparently the ads won’t pay for themselves then!

8. Microbreweries money

The Government will spend $10 million over the next four years to extend a special excise refund scheme for Australia’s microbrewers. We’ll drink to that!

9. The climate change sell job

Buried in the spending initiatives in the Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs portfolio is a $36.1 million for an information campaign around the household assistance that will be provided under the carbon tax plan. Get ready for an impressive sell job.

10. The tradie ambassadors

The Government will spend $200,000 to establish an Apprentice Ambassadors program that will involve the support of “a number of high-profiled Australians” to promote the idea of doing an apprenticeship. Nice idea, but does it really need that much money?

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Australia a glimpse of its economic future By Terry Ryder

I have a conviction, one that is confirmed everywhere I go, that Australians do not comprehend the enormity of what’s coming to our economy.

We’re on the threshold of the greatest period of prosperity in our history and there will be mega repercussions for real estate.
Few people get it. One reason is the numbers are so big as to be meaningless. What does $500 billion (the value of upcoming projects) really mean?
Another reason is the paucity of political leadership. The Federal Government is not selling the message and the Federal Opposition is talking down the nation daily.
A third reason is the negativity of media.

So we have a boom nation with a recession mentality. It’s quite bizarre.
I visited Gladstone recently to speak at a business conference. If anyone wants to study the implications of the resources revolution, Gladstone is a good place to start.
There are seven very large projects under construction in Gladstone. The total investment is about $55 billion and they are creating at least 17,000 construction jobs.
There are a further nine projects regarded as committed to start in coming years. These total about $25 billion in investment and a further 11,000 construction jobs.
The total impact is $80 billion in investment and 28,000 construction positions.
To put that into perspective, let me tell you about Gladstone of the recent past. In the years leading up to the 2008 event known as the GFC, Gladstone had around $20 billion worth of projects on its books.
That generated a tremendous upsurge in real estate demand. There was double-digit price growth in four consecutive years from 2004 to 2008, including more than 30 per cent growth in 2007.
Gladstone’s median house price rose from $230,000 in 2005 to almost $400,000 in 2010, despite a relatively minor decline in 2009 after the impacts if the GFC were felt.
Now ask yourself this question: if $20 billion in investment inspired that kind of real estate growth, what will $80 billion do?
Gladstone today is so alive with activity it’s positively electric. Just try getting a hotel room or a hire car there without booking weeks in advance.
Three of the four massive LNG processing facilities are now under construction, side by side on Curtis Island just offshore. One corporation, the global resources entity Bechtel (amazingly, a private family company), is responsible for building all three.
Dick McIlhattan, manager of Bechtel’s LNG projects in Australia (they’re also doing the $29 billion Wheatstone project in WA), gives further perspective to the gargantuan nature of these enterprises when he says: “The total world production at the moment is 200 to 220 million tonnes per annum. Our four Australian LNG jobs, including the three currently under construction on Curtis Island, will produce 40 to 45 million tonnes per annum.”
McIlhattan calls the three simultaneous Gladstone jobs “unprecedented work”. He says: “I have never seen anything like that in my 40 years in the company. This is something pretty unique.
“All three facilities have capacity to build additional trains. If the world market holds together, there will be a lot of work for a lot of years here in Gladstone.”
The three projects are now progressing from earthworks to the concrete-pouring stage. The labour force is building and eventually 6,000 workers will be accommodated in workers’camps on Curtis Island.
Meanwhile the Gladstone property market cannot satisfy the demand for accommodation. Around the city, which is forecast to double in population in the next 20 years, there are multiple major sites on which developers are rushing to build new housing.
Developers like Devine are planning new master-planned communities and the State Government’s Urban Land Development Authority is trying to fast-track multiple developments to provide “affordable” housing.
How affordable they can be remains to be seen when land values have risen by up to 35 per cent in the past 12 months, according to Queensland’s Valuer-General.
Developments of this nature take time and in the meantime dwelling prices and rents are rising fast.
In the past year suburbs and towns in the Gladstone area experienced double-digit increases in median prices (at a time when all our capital cities declined), with the highest being a rise of 21 per cent in 12 months.
Residential rental vacancies are almost non-existent and rents are rising by at least $100 per week at a time. There are lots of unhappy tenants in Gladstone, especially those not earning the big money on the resources project.

Gladstone’s experience is not unique – there are similar scenarios around Australia, including at Port Hedland and Karratha in Western Australia, the Bowen Basin and Surat Basin areas of Queensland, and the Hunter region of New South Wales.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Chronology of interest rate moves since 1990

The following is a chronology of the Reserve Bank of Australia's interest rate moves since 1990.
Each move is measured in basis points (bp), which are one-hundredths of a percentage point.

May 1 2012 cut to to 3.75 per cent by 50 bp
April 2012 4.25 per cent no change
March 6, 2012, no change 4.25 per cent
February 7,2012 4.25 no change
December 6 2011 Cut to 4.25 per cent
Novemer 1 2011 Cut to 4.5 per cent
October 4 2000 No change
September 6 2011 No change
August 2 2011 No change
July 5 2011 No change
June 7 2011 No change
May 3 2011 No change
April 5 2011 No change
March 1 2011 No change
Feb 1 2011 No change
Dec 7 2010 No change
Nov 2 2010 Up 25 bp to 4.75
Oct 5 2010 No change
Sep 7 2010 No change
Aug 3 2010 No change
Jul 6 2010 No change
Jun 1 2010 No change
May 4 2010 Up 25 bp to 4.5
Apr  6  2010  Up 25 bp to 4.25
Mar  2 2010     Up   25 bp    to   4.00
Dec  1 2009     Up   25 bp    to   3.75
Nov  3 2009     Up   25 bp    to   3.50
Oct  6 2009     Up   25 bp    to   3.25
Apr  7 2009    Down  25 bp    to   3.00
Feb  3 2009    Down 100 bp    to   3.25
Dec  2 2008    Down 100 bp    to   4.25
Nov  4 2008    Down  75 bp    to   5.25
Oct  7 2008    Down 100 bp    to   6.00
Sep  2 2008    Down  25 bp    to   7.00
Mar  4 2008     Up   25 bp    to   7.25
Feb  5 2008     Up   25 bp    to   7.00
Nov  7 2007     Up   25 bp    to   6.75
Aug  8 2007     Up   25 bp    to   6.50
Nov  8 2006     Up   25 bp    to   6.25
Aug  2 2006     Up   25 bp    to   6.00
May  3 2006     Up   25 bp    to   5.75
Mar  2 2005     Up   25 bp    to   5.50
Dec  3 2003     Up   25 bp    to   5.25
Nov  5 2003     Up   25 bp    to   5.00
June 5 2002     Up   25 bp    to   4.75
May  8 2002     Up   25 bp    to   4.50
Dec  5 2001    Down  25 bp    to   4.25
Oct  3 2001    Down  25 bp    to   4.50
Sept 5 2001    Down  25 bp    to   4.75
Apr  4 2001    Down  50 bp    to   5.0
Mch  7 2001    Down  25 bp    to   5.5
Feb  7 2001    Down  50 bp    to   5.75
Aug  2 2000     Up   25 bp    to   6.25
May  3 2000     Up   25 bp    to   6.0
Apr  5 2000     Up   25 bp    to   5.75
Feb  2 2000     Up   50 bp    to   5.5
Nov  3 1999     Up   25 bp    to   5.0
Dec  2 1998    Down  25 bp    to   4.75
Jul 30 1997    Down  50 bp    to   5.0
May 23 1997    Down  50 bp    to   5.5
Dec 11 1996    Down  50 bp    to   6.0
Nov  6 1996    Down  50 bp    to   6.5
Jul 31 1996    Down  50 bp    to   7.0
Dec 14 1994     Up  100 bp    to   7.5
Oct 24 1994     Up  100 bp    to   6.5
Aug 17 1994     Up   75 bp    to   5.5
Jul 30 1993    Down  50 bp    to   4.75
Mar 23 1993    Down  50 bp    to   5.25
Jul  8 1992    Down  75 bp    to   5.75
May  6 1992    Down 100 bp    to   6.5
Jan  8 1992    Down 100 bp    to   7.5
Nov  6 1991    Down 100 bp    to   8.5
Sep  3 1991    Down 100 bp    to   9.5
May 16 1991    Down 100 bp    to  10.5
Apr  4 1991    Down  50 bp    to  11.5
Dec 18 1990    Down 100 bp    to  12.0
Oct 15 1990    Down 100 bp    to  13.0
Aug  2 1990    Down 100 bp    to  14.0
Apr  4 1990    Down 100-150bp to  15.0 to 15.5
Feb 15 1990    Down  50 bp    to  16.5 to 17.0
Jan 23 1990    Down  50-100bp to  17.0 to 17.5
Reuters, BusinssDay

Thursday, March 22, 2012

High growth, high returns and high risk

I always preach caution to investors lured by mining towns. They’re the ultimate risk-return conundrum for the mum-and-dad investor.
The considerable appeal of high rental yields and fast capital growth needs to be weighed against the risk of all that collapsing amid a GFC or a reversal of fortunes for a key employer.
The typical package for an investor buying a capital city suburban house in the past 10 years is rental yields around 4 per cent (which means a loss-making investment or, as the industry likes to term it, a negatively-geared one) and capital growth averaging 10 per cent a year.
Outside of the capital cities there are regional locations where capital growth has averaged better than 20 per cent a year over the past decade.
There are also places where you can get double-digit rental returns, delivering an investment that provides weekly income.
Here’s the thing: those high-capital-growth places and those high-rental-return places are the same places.
They’re all mining towns or regional centres which service mining towns.
One of them has averaged 33 per cent in annual growth in its median house price. It also can provide rental returns around 15 per cent.
This extraordinary place is Moranbah. It’s in the Bowen Basin, Australia’s greatest coal province, in central Queensland.
No one can say for sure what its population is, because so many people who work there don’t live there – or live there temporarily as fly-in-fly-out or drive-in-drive-out workers.
The permanent residential population is around 8,000 but there could be double that number in the town at any point in the working week.
Ten years ago you could have bought the typical Moranbah house for under $50,000. Today you pay twelve times as much.
As the town’s importance as a mining hub expanded, there was exponential price growth from 2003 to 2007. Growth stopped around the onset of the GFC, which put a dampener on the resources sector for a couple of years.
Unlike other mining towns, however, Moranbah did not suffer any noticeable loss of values – just a short-term pause in the growth. It resumed strongly last year and now appears headed for the stratosphere again.
Australian Property Monitors records a long-term growth average of 33 per cent a year, which means values doubling every two years or so.
The only other markets in Australia that come close to that performance are Dysart, another coal mining town in the Bowen Basin, and Port Hedland in Western Australia.
The other extraordinary thing about Moranbah is that rents have grown recently at an even faster pace than prices.
The Real Estate Institute of Queensland records a median rental yield for the Isaac Region (of which Moranbah is the key mining town) of 15.3 per cent. In 30 years of writing about Australian residential property I haven’t seen a number like that.
Properties currently for sale in Moranbah include a three-bedroom house tenanted at $2,000 per week and with an asking price of $820,000, which equates to a 13 per cent yield. Another rented at $1,900 per week had an asking price of $789,000, which equates to 12.5 per cent.
A four-bedroom house with an asking price of $920,000 has a two-year company lease in place at $3,100 per week. That’s $161,200 in annual rent and a yield of 17.5 per cent.
There are many others with similar numbers.
While the median price for Moranbah is now around $600,000, I can’t find anything for sale at the moment for less than $750,000 – and we’re not talking about palatial modern homes, in most cases.
This is why such investments are so risky. When you’re paying $800,000 in a small country town for a house that might fetch $350,000 in an outer Brisbane suburb, you known the values are at best tenuous.
They depend on the resources sector continuing to grow and also depend on the current lack of housing supply in Moranbah. Both situations could change in the future.
I do believe the current upturn in the resources sector has long-term horizons because the industrialization of new growth nations like India and China is only just beginning. And that’s where the demand for Bowen Basin coal originates.
Certainly BHP Billiton thinks so, moving forward with the $4 billion Caval Ridge project, while Anglo American is tipping $1.7 billion into the Grosvenor project.
These and other projects are forecast to bring another 10,000 FIFO workers into Moranbah, effectively doubling its population.
But be aware of the risks. BHP showed at Ravensthorpe in Western Australia, where it closed a $2 billion mine only months after completing its construction at a cost of 1,800 jobs, that it’s prepared to take ruthless action if the world economic climate turns south.
By Terry Ryder, 22nd March 2012

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Home loans

The iSelect Home Loans Leader Board (Most popular home loans products sold via iSelect)

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