Weekend Herald

Auckland apartment supply could stall

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Auckland’s present apartment boom could be remembered as “a mere blip” unless market conditions improve, warns senior research analyst at CBRE Tamba Carleton.

While consents issued for Auckland apartments doubled in the last 12 months, Carleton sees the scarcity of new projects entering the “supply pipeline”, as a concern.

“Despite a tangible shift in market preference toward apartments in recent years, the constraine­d developmen­t environmen­t means future supply is struggling to match underlying demand,” she points out.

Carleton quotes a report by the real estate group, highlighti­ng Statistics NZ data, which shows that rolling annual building consents exceeded 12,000 in the year to May

2018 — a 15-year high.

Of this total, standalone housing comprised 47 per cent, apartments

24 per cent and terraced housing 21 per cent.

“But while there was little change in the rolling volume of standalone house consents between May 2016 and May 2018, the figure for apartments almost doubled during the same period, overtaking terraced houses to be the second-largest consented type of dwelling after standalone houses.

“The data certainly highlights a shift in preference toward apartments in recent years. Quality of design is an aspect helping to fuel demand, particular­ly by owner-occupiers. A wide range of purchasers — not limited to the stereo-typical baby boomer demographi­c — are opting for the lifestyle and location benefits of apartments, as being cheaper to purchase than other dwellings, particular­ly in city fringe areas.”

Figures show that 1,650 apartments were completed last year, but CBRE’s supply projection­s indicate the peak is yet to come — with

2,700 units due in 2018 and more than

3,300 next year.

Carleton acknowledg­es while volume of projects entering constructi­on stage has been high over the past year, there have been fewer new project launches. Hence the pre-constructi­on stage of the apartment supply pipeline has declined significan­tly since late last year.

“If this trend is sustained, the increase in building consents will only be a short lived blip. The number of new projects getting launched to market

The feasibilit­y of developmen­ts is being questioned, apparently as some purchasers become less willing to pay the prices sufficient to make them viable. Tamba Carleton

is slowing significan­tly, with no CBD and Fringe launches occurring since October 2017.

“Much of this is being driven by a slower property market, which is constraini­ng buyer activity, pricing and affordabil­ity at a time when developmen­t costs continue to increase and the funding environmen­t has tightened-up.

“The feasibilit­y of developmen­ts is being questioned, apparently as some purchasers become less willing to pay the prices sufficient to make them viable.”

The current figure of 7,722 apartments working their way through the consenting and constructi­on pipeline, is the smallest it’s been for two years, notes Carleton.

With more than 5,200 units of this total due for completion before the end of 2019, Carlton sees potential for the pipeline to shrink much further again, unless there is a material increase in new project launches.

“In this regard one of the more important swing factors will be the impact of Government actions around investment and rental market regulation, the effectiven­ess of the Kiwibuild programme and various efforts by Local and Central Government urban developmen­t agencies.”

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