Townsville Bulletin

Ray of light on horizon for real estate investors

- ANTHONY KEANE

A PROPERTY price turnaround is one of several factors likely to encourage real estate investors in the next six months.

As new data suggests, the national property downturn looks set to bottom out soon and 2020 may be the first year of across-the-board house price growth in state capital cities since 2013.

However, many investors will still find financing a property difficult.

Metropole Property Strategist­s CEO Michael Yardney said house prices might fall for the next couple of months but should be flat or higher by December, with 3-5 per cent growth tipped for most capitals next year.

He said housing market momentum was benefiting from: assessment criteria from August; • no longer need to assess home loan applicatio­ns using a minimum interest rate of 7.25 per cent to determine a borrower’s ability to service the loan;

moneysaver­hq.com.au •

“Prices are not going to boom any time soon, but the property pessimists who forecast significan­t falls in property values will again be proven wrong,” Mr Yardney said.

“While interest rates have fallen to historic lows and mortgages may be more affordable, many investors will still have difficulty borrowing funds to invest because of the bank’s stricter lending criteria, including more careful scrutiny of personal expenditur­e.”

Realestate.com.au chief economist Nerida Conisbee said access to finance for investors was improving, but was still tough.

“If you are looking to buy, make sure you have preapprova­l in order,” she said.

Ms Conisbee said it appeared that Australia’s two biggest housing markets, Sydney and Melbourne, were starting to turn around.

“Things are very different to where they were a couple of months ago,” she said.

“The Coalition’s win means tax incentives are still there, we’ve had a couple of rate cuts and there’s tax cut stimulus.”

The latest Corelogic figures show annual house price falls of more than 9 per cent in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Darwin for the 2018-19 financial year.

Brisbane was down 2.6 per cent and Adelaide dropped 0.3 per cent, while Hobart rose 2.9 per cent and Canberra went up 1.4 per cent.

Corelogic head of research Tim Lawless said data for the past month suggested the downturn was running out of steam.

“The improvemen­t in housing market conditions over the first five months of the year has largely been organic,” he said.

“However, since mid-may there has been a raft of announceme­nts that should provide a further positive flow through to housing demand.”

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