Weekend Herald

Stay calm and carry on

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Real estate prices in Auckland have been stagnant since the start of the year says ASB economist Kim Mundy. She writes this week that prices in the SuperCity have “stopped dead in the water”. I wonder why. Looking at the country as a whole, average prices for real estate rose 0.8 per cent in the June quarter according to Quotable Value — the strongest three- month increase since September last year. But Auckland prices dipped.

The underlying trend seems to be that though prices in the SuperCity were down 3 per cent in June ( according to realtor Barfoot & Thompson), the rest of the country has seen price increases. So let’s not get ahead of ourselves here.

As real estate sales slow, they are down 30 per cent compared to the heady days of a year ago, and homes continue to be taken to market, the table has turned on sellers. It is now a buyers’ market.

Unfortunat­ely, home buyers may find getting the mortgage they need more difficult than six months ago which means the days of people racing to buy a property at any price are over ( at least for now).

Mundy says: “Prices will remain flat or edge down slightly, the number of new listings coming onto the market will eventually slow.”

I don’t buy it, because people with property to sell will take it to market. But any drop in sales activity will be because banks refuse to fund much- needed housing developmen­ts, decline loan applicatio­ns, call in loans, and raise interest rates.

Any dampening of the real estate market will be down to the banks; the same banks that fuelled it with cheap loans that were handed out to almost anyone who walked in off the street. The same banks that showered customers with gifts of cash inducement­s.

The bottom line is that the underlying picture has not changed, particular­ly in Auckland.

We are still short of 35,000 homes. Apartment blocks are going up across Auckland, and plenty of property investors may decide to sell their investment­s, having made a killing from buying two years ago.

And there are still more than 1000 people arriving to live in New Zealand every week — the vast majority hoping to settle in Auckland. Any boom, bust or soft landing, starts and ends with the banks.

But right now, cash buyers reign supreme.

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