Rotorua Daily Post

‘It’s a buyer's market': Median price falls $70K

Biggest fall in eight years, agent urges first-home buyers not to wait

- Cira Olivier

Rotorua’s median house price has taken its biggest fall in eight years, dropping $70,000 in a month. Fear of overpaying is replacing the fear of missing out, while rising interest rates and tighter lending criteria were factors in the drop, agents say.

Rotorua’s median price dropped $70,000 — or 9.1 per cent — to $700,000 between March and April, according to the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand’s (REINZ) latest figures.

Western Bay of Plenty’s median house price dropped $140,000 — or 12.7 per cent — to $960,000 while Tauranga’s dropped $59,000 — or 5.6 per cent — to $991,000.

Across the Bay of Plenty, the median price was down 4 per cent and sales were down 29 per cent.

It was also taking an average of 41 days to sell a property, five days more than March and 11 more days than April 2021.

REINZ chief executive Jen Baird said the last time Rotorua’s median house price had dropped this much was in March eight years ago when it fell $72,000 in a month.

Rotorua Profession­als Mcdowell Real Estate principal Steve Lovegrove said the price drop reflected people’s affordabil­ity and access to money.

But Lovegrove said buyers had more choices with more houses on the market, meaning vendors were competing against each other.

There was no need to panic for people who could hold onto their houses, but those who bought last year hoping to make a quick profit were out of luck, he said.

While he said he could not predict what would happen in the short-term, “property prices would always increase in the long term”.

First National principal and Rotorua REINZ spokeswoma­n Ann Crossley said first home buyers had almost been non-existent.

“They might be sitting and waiting, thinking house prices are going to drop. But I think they should not be waiting. I think they should be fixing their mortgages and getting on with it.”

Crossley said most of the market activity was with the second or third home buyers, however, property was taking longer to sell.

“There is not that frenzy or ‘sell in two weeks’ scenario.”

Property Brokers regional manager for the Bay of Plenty, Simon Short, said the price drop came down to interest rates.

“We all saw it coming and it’s here now, it’s a buyer’s market.”

He believed it would continue to drop as interest rates rose.

Tremains Bay of Plenty managing director Anton Jones said vendors were finding the market difficult as there was more choice for buyers who previously had to wait or enter bidding wars.

Jones said school holidays and long weekends were a factor in the drop, with property listings jumping from 50 to 90 during the first week back at school.

First National Real Estate Tauranga general manager Cameron Hooper said he had not seen a drop in price like this since the Global Financial Crisis.

“That’s the first time in a long time that under 200 houses have sold in Tauranga City . . . it’s pretty scary knowing we’re at 160,” he said. “I think next month will be just as bad.”

He said the “only positive” was that there was not a flood of listings as this

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Rotorua median house prices have fallen by $70,000.
Photo / NZME Rotorua median house prices have fallen by $70,000.
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 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Rotorua Profession­als Mcdowell Real Estate principal Steve Lovegrove.
Photo / NZME Rotorua Profession­als Mcdowell Real Estate principal Steve Lovegrove.

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