Australia’s home prices rise again in sign of market bottom

Published Tue, May 2, 2023 · 08:43 AM

AUSTRALIAN home prices rose for a second straight month in April, in a further signal that the nation’s property market may have hit a floor ahead of a central bank rate decision on Tuesday (May 2).

Figures from property consultant CoreLogic released on Monday showed prices nationally rose 0.5 per cent in April from March, when values were up 0.6 per cent, indicating Australian home prices may have bottomed out after slumping 9.1 per cent from May 2022 to February.

Sydney, the capital of Australia’s most populous state New South Wales, led the way in April, with prices rising 1.3 per cent, while in the capital of Victoria state, Melbourne, they ticked up 0.1 per cent, the data showed.

CoreLogic research director Tim Lawless said prices were “stabilising or rising” across most parts of Australia, and there was a good chance consumer sentiment would improve, boosting housing purchases and sales, as interest rates looked more stable.

“Other indicators are confirming the positive shift,” he said. “Auction clearance rates are holding slightly above the long-run average, sentiment has lifted and home sales are trending around the previous five-year average.”

Adding to improved prospects for the housing market, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) is tipped to hold its interest rate unchanged on Tuesday for a second straight monthly meeting, a Reuters poll of economists showed last week.

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Gareth Aird, head of Australian Economics at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said the headwind on property prices from interest rates ratcheting higher had largely run its course, given we were almost at the top of the RBA’s hiking cycle.

“We no longer expect our long held forecast for a national decline in home prices from peak to trough of about 15 per cent to come to fruition. We now expect home prices to rise by 3 per cent in 2023 and forecast a further increase of 5 per cent in 2024.”

CBA have the country’s largest mortgage book.

Shane Oliver, chief economist at AMP, also no longer expects a top-to-bottom fall of 15-20 per cent in housing prices, citing “a far worse property demand and supply imbalance” with immigration levels surging and supply remaining tight. He now forecasts prices to be up slightly this year.

PropTrack data on Monday showed that home prices rose 0.14 per cent in April, bringing the cumulative increase this year to 0.75 per cent. REUTERS

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