2016 property market “The Year of Unpredictability”
EMBARGOED TILL 1 OCTOBER
2016
2016 property
market “The Year of
Unpredictability”
Spring property market is
not blooming
The traditional lift in housing market
activity during September failed to eventuate, highlighting
the unpredictable nature of the property market in 2016,
says realestate.co.nz spokesperson Vanessa Taylor.
Real-time market statistics from realestate.co.nz show
new property listings across the country
down by 12.2 per cent on the same time the previous year,
and the total housing stock down 23 per
cent.
“Typically we can see trends around what happens
during the different phases of a year, such as a slow-down
in the winter months and a resurgence in spring, but 2016 is
The Year of Unpredictability,” says
Vanessa.
“Traditional seasonal behaviour is diminishing
as sellers appear to be more focused on selling at a premium
particularly in markets like Auckland, while buyers are
considering all their options and properties are now taking
a longer time to turn over.”
MAIN CENTRES TELL
IT ALL
New asking price high for
Auckland but fewer listings and longer to
sell
Auckland was the only region in the
whole of the country where total housing stock levels
increased (by 4 per cent). However new property listings in
September were 17.8 per cent lower than the same month in
2015.
While Auckland asking prices hit another all-time
high at $933,435 (a 2.8 per cent increase on the previous
month), properties are spending longer on the
market.
“With fewer new listings coming onto the
market, it appears that sellers are looking to command
higher prices,” says Vanessa.
“On the other hand, if
there were no new listings coming onto the Auckland market,
all existing properties would now take 12 weeks to sell,
which indicates a slow-down in activity,” she says.
By
comparison, in the same period last year (September 2015),
if there were no new listings coming onto the Auckland
market, all existing properties in Auckland would have taken
9.6 weeks to sell.
Vanessa says it could be that the
buyer sentiment has shifted from a “must buy now mentality
at all cost” to a more considered view of options,
particularly with prices continuing to rise and a limited
choice of properties for sale.
Significant
fall in new housing stock in Waikato, asking prices up
Waikato’s total housing stock level
plunged 31.9 per cent compared to the same month last year
which is a massive drop compared with neighbouring Auckland
which was the only region where total housing stock levels
rose.
“Aucklanders have been active in the Waikato
region for quite some time and have perhaps absorbed the
first round of property offered by Waikato sellers who
capitalised on the demand.”
New property listings
coming onto the market in September in the Waikato fell by
20.1 per cent compared to the same time last year and asking
prices lifted by 3.0 per cent on the previous month, which
is slightly higher than Auckland.
If no new listings
came onto the market, all existing properties would be sold
in 10 weeks in the Waikato region.
Wellington
new listings fall, following a strong
August
It’s a similar picture in the
Wellington region where new property listings fell 8.1 per
cent in September compared to the same time last year.
“However Wellington is an example of the unpredictable
nature of the industry at this time, given that in August
2016 new listings increased by 36.8 per cent compared to
August 2015,” says Vanessa Taylor.
Total housing stock
in September 2016 was 37.7 per cent lower than the same
month the previous year. Property asking prices in
Wellington rose 1.4 per cent compared with the prior
month.
Property asking prices and new listings
fall in Canterbury and Otago
While asking
prices in the North Island main centres continued to rise,
in Canterbury and Otago they fell by 2.5 per cent and 1.7
per cent respectively compared to the prior month.
New
listings were also down compared with the previous year,
with Canterbury falling by 4.7 per cent and Otago by 12.6
per cent compared to September
2015.
ENDS