The Post

Prices stall in busiest suburbs

- Susan Edmunds

High turnover rates and falling prices may be a sign that there are too many new houses going in to some parts of Auckland, commentato­rs say.

CoreLogic has produced data on the suburbs around the country with the highest turnover rate – measured as the number of sales as a percentage of total housing stock.

Kumeu was top of the list at 14.7 per cent. It was followed by Hobsonvill­e, Pokeno, Whenuapai and Silverdale.

All of those areas also recorded a fall in prices over the year.

Only sixth-rated Mangakino reported high turnover and a lift in prices, up 15 per cent.

Property developer David Whitburn said there was a ‘‘bit of an oversupply’’ in some of the areas on the outskirts of Auckland.

Some of the sales being recorded were the final stages of large developmen­ts being finished, he said.

‘‘Pokeno in particular, I do see an oversupply there and downward price pressure.’’

He said that as developmen­ts got further away from city centres, people started to question the time it would add to their commute to work.

There was a small oversupply of apartments in Hobsonvill­e Point, he said, which was gently pushing prices down.

Economist Shamubeel Eaqub agreed. He said greenfield­s developmen­ts were being opened up in many areas. ‘‘We have had a lot of supply on the edges, although a lot of mediumdens­ity stuff is closer in.’’ CoreLogic economist Kelvin Davidson said some buyers might have concerns about the infrastruc­ture available when purchasing a property in a place such as Pokeno, in Waikato. ‘‘There’s so much building going on and it relies on the motorway, there’s no public transport.’’ Queenstown or Selwyn could experience a marked oversupply of property if population growth slowed, he said.

Auckland Council chief economist David Norman said there were a large number of houses being built but the price weakness reported was not necessaril­y a sign of oversupply.

Infometric­s chief forecaster Gareth Kiernan said there was still a significan­t undersuppl­y of housing in Auckland.

‘‘You’d need to see much more substantia­l price falls, particular­ly given the magnitude of price rises over the last decade, before you could start to think about the Auckland market being oversuppli­ed.’’

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