Nelson Mail

Interest rate rises hit affordabil­ity of homes

- Miriam Bell

Home affordabil­ity has declined by 14.3 per cent nationwide over the past year due to house price and interest rate rises, new Massey University analysis shows.

Median house prices increased by 3.7 per cent, or $30,000, nationwide over the three months to August, according to the university’s latest Home Affordabil­ity report.

Over the same period, interest rates started to rise from record lows and the combinatio­n meant home affordabil­ity dropped by 2.7 per cent. That contribute­d to the annual decline in affordabil­ity.

But the national house price-toincome ratios improved over the quarter to August, with prices moving from 12.4 to 12 times the average annual wage.

Massey University professor Graham Squires said the results highlighte­d what a powerful variable interest rates were in the housing affordabil­ity equation.

The big housing story this year had been soaring prices, but the increases were starting to taper off, and that improved the price-toincome ratio slightly, he said.

‘‘Now affordabil­ity is worsening because of rising interest rates. This will dampen prices further, but interest rates are a doubleedge­d sword because higher rates mean higher servicing costs for property owners.’’

The Reserve Bank lifted the official cash rate by 25 basis points to 0.75 per cent on Wednesday. It was the second rise this year, after it was cut to a record low 0.25 per cent when the Covid pandemic started last year.

Banks had been raising rates in response to the hikes. Squires said this signalled the end of the low interest rate environmen­t that had been at play in recent years.

While higher servicing costs were not good news for property owners, people still held on to housing assets longer than other assets as they assumed appreciati­on would outstrip the costs of holding, he said.

Of the regions, the biggest annual drop in affordabil­ity was Manawatū/Whanganui where it was down 57.9 per cent. Bay of Plenty, Gisborne, Hawke’s Bay and Tasman followed with declines of more than 30 per cent.

Canterbury had the biggest quarterly decline in affordabil­ity with 20.2 per cent, while Bay of Plenty, Manawatū/Whanganui and

Southland recorded drops of more than 15 per cent.

In Auckland, affordabil­ity declined by 6.6 per cent over the quarter and 11.0 per cent over the year. The region remained the least affordable in the country with a price-to-income ratio of 15.7.

Median prices were up in nine of 16 regions over the quarter with the biggest increases in Marlboroug­h (34.6 per cent or $225,000) and Waikato (6.8 per cent or $50,000). Manawatū/Whanganui had an annual price increase of 35.6 per cent or $160,000.

Financial capital flowed around the country easily, and yields had been better in more affordable regions, such as Manawatū/ Whanganui, he said.

‘‘That attracts capital and has led to price increases, which means that all the regions are now struggling in terms of affordabil­ity.’’

 ?? WARWICK SMITH/ STUFF ?? The biggest annual drop in housing affordabil­ity was in Manawatū/ Whanganui where it was down 57.9 per cent.
WARWICK SMITH/ STUFF The biggest annual drop in housing affordabil­ity was in Manawatū/ Whanganui where it was down 57.9 per cent.

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