Sydney property prices seen falling 20% in harbinger for nation
SYDNEY property prices are expected to fall by up to 20 per cent as rising interest rates amplify affordability challenges in one of the world's most expensive markets. Such a result would likely augur nationwide declines.
Australia & New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ) economists predict housing in the nation's largest city will drop by one-fifth this year and next. Bloomberg Intelligence (BI), off a tighter time frame, sees Sydney falling 12-15 per cent in 2022, based on the cash rate climbing to 1.75 per cent by December from the current 0.85 per cent.
Housing is set to be a key casualty of the Reserve Bank's drive to remove monetary stimulus as it tries to tackle intensifying inflation. The central bank surprised with a 50-basis point hike last week after starting its tightening cycle in May, and sentiment is already falling among Australia's heavily indebted households, potentially limiting how fast and far the RBA can move.
Yet a fall of such a scale would still only be a reversal, given Sydney prices soared 25 per cent last year alone, fuelled by near-zero rates and pandemic-era aid.
BI estimates a Sydney couple's ability to service a mortgage would decline by more than 20 per cent, based on a model that uses average net income of A$140,700 (S$136,823) by end-2022. It also factored in average household expenditure and bank-lending assessment rates for an 80 per cent loan-to-value ratio mortgage.
"The increase in mortgage rates is now expected to be larger and to come at a more rapid pace," said ANZ bank's senior economist Adelaide Timbrell. "Given that the average borrower has a large savings buffer, we expect reduced borrowing capacity to be the key driver, not forced selling."
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Property Insights
Get an exclusive analysis of real estate and property news in Singapore and beyond.
Sydney is typically a harbinger of trends in Australia's A$10 trillion residential real estate market. Kieran Davies, chief macro strategist at Coolabah Capital Investments, sees national prices dropping 15 per cent in 2023, 13 per cent in 2024 and 11 per cent the following year for a cumulative decline of 30 per cent.
If his predictions were realised, that would erase the 22 per cent rise in home values last year and a forecast 8 per cent gain this year. Australia's median dwelling price is A$752,507, underpinned by heavy borrowing amid low rates, a supply shortfall and surging demand in what's been a high-immigration economy.
Davies' predictions are based on money markets pricing in a cash rate of 4.25 per cent in 2024.
"There is significant uncertainty around the model's forecasts, but the results suggest a large short-term correction is in store as the RBA takes back its emergency policy stimulus," Davies said. BLOOMBERG
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Property
Airbnb promises to combat sex work in rentals during Paris Olympics
Hong Kong property deals hit three-year high in April
More homes planned in Media Circle to support housing demand
Qatari Sheikh sells London mansion to fellow royal for £39 million
Toronto home sales fall for third month in April; prices rise
Far East Shopping Centre owners in private talks after close of S$928 million en bloc tender