The Press

Where house prices have gone up annually

- Miriam Bell

New Zealand’s housing market had a soft start to the year, but some areas have seen their annual price growth rates turn positive, new CoreLogic figures show.

The average national house price rose 0.5% to $934,806 in March, according to the property research company’s latest House Price Index.

It followed muted gains of 0.4% and 0.3% in January and February respective­ly, and meant prices increased just 1.1% over the first quarter of this year.

The national average was now 3.2%, or $29,361, up from its September trough, but it remained 10.4%, or $109,455 below the March 2022 market peak.

CoreLogic chief property economist Kelvin Davidson said the run of three softer results in a row at the national level was not surprising given stretched housing affordabil­ity and high mortgage rates.

The market could be described as “not too hot, not too cold”, but that was not unusual and had been seen in past cycles where prices ticked along for a few years without significan­t increases, he said.

Another feature of the market was the inconsiste­nt, “patchy” nature of the upturn, which was evident in the latest figures, he said.

On a monthly basis, prices in Wellington, Auckland, Christchur­ch and Dunedin rose by 0.9%, 0.4%, 0.6%, and 0.5% in March to averages of $923,033, $1.29 million, $762,456 and $640,388 respective­ly.

But prices in both Tauranga and Hamilton were down 0.2% to $1.03m and $807,251 in March, and price performanc­e in sub-markets across the Wellington and Auckland regions was variable.

Outside the main centres, monthly price performanc­e was also mixed, with Invercargi­ll, New Plymouth, Napier, and Rotorua all up by at least 1%, but Gisborne and Queenstown both down 1.2%.

Despite the variabilit­y, annual price growth rates turned positive in a number of markets, the figures showed.

Queenstown and Invercargi­ll had the biggest annual increases with 4.5% and 4.4%, followed by Christchur­ch with 3.6%.

In Hastings and Dunedin the average price was up 3.1% and 2.9% on the same time last year, while Wellington’s regional average was up 2%.

Davidson said there was always local variation in price trends, even when the national market was booming.

It was not a surprise some regions were rising more strongly than others in the current “testing” market, while others were still weak, or actually falling, he said.

“The general trend should remain upwards in the coming months, but it’s unlikely to be a straight line everywhere, and the data is a reminder this upturn may well be inconsiste­nt from month to month, and across regions.”

More listings were coming on to the market, which gave buyers more choice, and sales volumes were now trending higher – although from a very low base, he said.

High mortgage rates remained the biggest challenge for the market, and while they might have peaked they were unlikely to get much lower any time soon, he said.

“If the Reserve Bank’s current projection­s prove to be correct, the official cash rate may not start to fall until next year, highlighti­ng that shorter-term fixed mortgage rates may not drop much for at least another six to nine months.

“Changes to tax policy will help investors tax flow, but will not be enough to trump high rates and send them rushing back to the market in huge numbers.”

Davidson said it all suggested the upturn would remain subdued, and there was a good chance monthly price growth rates would be around 0.4% to 0.5% for most of this year. That would make for annualised growth around the 5% mark, which was consistent with still-stretched affordabil­ity, high mortgage rates, and reasonable levels of listings/buyer choice, he said.

 ?? ?? The average national house price rose 0.5% in March to hit $934,806, CoreLogic figures show.
The average national house price rose 0.5% in March to hit $934,806, CoreLogic figures show.

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