Property: The Dark Truth Politicians Don’t Want To Hear!

The RBA minutes just out included a discussion about the case to raise the cash rate further. It centred on the observation that it would take some time for inflation to return to target and the labour market to full employment. Inflation was expected to take a further two years or so to return towards the midpoint of the target range under the central forecast. In the end, they held the cash rate target unchanged at 4.35 per cent, and the interest rate on Exchange Settlement balances unchanged at 4.25 per cent. But this is an important signal.

Yet the 13 RBA driven rate hikes have had a perverse impact on property. Since January last year, Australian property prices have been rising in many parts of the country, recouping almost all the losses incurred after the Reserve Bank of Australia began raising interest rates in 2022. They might be slowing a bit, now, but that was not meant to happen.

In fact, there is strong demand for property, buoyed both by increased population and a resurgence in demand from cashed-up older generations. Yet supply is not keeping up, and mortgage lending is tighter now for many as the costs of a mortgage rise. The signals are clear – we have a major crisis in housing. Renters are caught in the cross-fire, but purchasers are also in the firing line too.

Housing rapidly is becoming a lightning rod for a generation staring down the prospect of having next to no hope of buying a residence under their own steam. We may see ourselves as an egalitarian society with a universal education and health system that provides opportunities for anyone willing to have a go. Housing is broken, and politicians won’t tackle the real issues.
Could it be that the fact they are much more likely to own investment property stop them from acting, or is it the fact that this would require real action, not political spin?

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Tip Of The Asbestos Iceberg: The Nightmare Continues Across NSW

More sites have now been confirmed to have asbestos including transport infrastructure projects, primary and secondary schools, supermarkets and hospitals, according to the EPA, across NSW. The premier, Chris Minns, has said the Environment Protection Authority (EPA) is examining the sites as it undertakes its largest investigation ever.

The agency on Saturday said a public school, park, and two part-built housing estates were tainted, while transport projects, a warehouse and a hospital have also been confirmed as impacted.

The activity underway to tackle exposed sites is a pimple compared with the total load in the community. But of course, agencies do not want to take the lid off that can, so individuals must become asbestos aware, that is the cornerstone of our ongoing campaign over at Asbestos Awareness Australia.

https://www.youtube.com/@UCZq09OVTbSjuadMKi6MRkVw

The Rental Market Is Broken…

In my latest surveys we showed that cash flow stress among households has risen to an all time high of 73.47% or more than 2.27 million households.

Mapping the Market data from CoreLogic shows the high proportion of areas where house rents have risen by 20% or more across Sydney, and Melbourne, those here, some areas especially to the east of the city did not follow suite. House rents in Brisbane showed more diversity, though central Brisbane saw consider considerable hikes. Adelaide and Perth also had many hot spot areas across house rentals, with some areas to the east of both CBD’s reporting slower growth rates over the past year.

That said, Canberra and Hobart bucked the trend with little or no growth – of course there are rents controls in the ACT which helps to moderate rents.

All this means that for many renters the ability to house themselves has become even more expensive, and this of course flows through into the inflation data with all rents – not just new rents running close to 10% annualised. It’s a real mess, and leading to real social consequences.

Then again, there are some winners as according to data from SQM Research residential landlords in some inner-city and middle ring suburbs pocketed up to $56,000 extra rental income in the past 12 months as rents hit record highs across the major capital cities.

A critical factor here is that some landlords, sitting on strong capital gains, are looking to crystalize their paper profits so have listed their rental property for sale, a trend we see most strongly in Melbourne, but it is spreading elsewhere. In addition, higher rents are not enough to cover the increased mortgage costs, even after negative gearing, so the supply on rental property is on the decline at a time when migration continues to run hot.

The Rental Market Is Broken but do those in political circles want to tackle this critical issue? Lip-service apart, I suspect not. So to that extent, Australia in broken too.

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The RBA Is Trapped: With Tarric Brooker…

Journalist Tarric Brooker joins me for a Friday review, and this week we look at the RBA and how it is trapped thanks to conflicting data.

He also walks through some important slides on property and China. Here is the link to the slides: https://avidcom.substack.com/p/dfa-chart-pack-16th-february-2024

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RBA Independence Discussed In Senate Committee

RBA Independence or should that be spelt “dance…” was one issue discussed during the Senate Economics Legislation Committee on Thursday 15th February 2024.

Senators Nick McKim and Gerard Rennick quiz RBA Governor Michelle Bullock during the hearings. Highly relevant given the current proposed legislation to remove Government oversight of their activities.

Segments on other issues will follow. Here is the link to the full hearing (1:30:00) https://www.aph.gov.au/News_and_Events/Watch_Read_Listen/ParlView/video/2174307

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Unemployment Wobbles Higher In January, But Don’t Expect Quick Rate Cuts!

Last month Australian employment surprisingly tumbled in December, snapping four months of gains and sending the currency lower as traders boosted wagers on the Reserve Bank switching to policy easing this year. The economy had shed 65,100 roles, led by the biggest monthly drop in full-time employment since the height of pandemic, but unemployment held at 3.9%, cushioned by a sharp fall in the number of workers seeking jobs.

Now we got the next update from the ABS which showed that the economy added just 500 roles in January, confounding expectations for a 25,000 gain and well shy of numbers needed to hold down the jobless rate.

Unemployment advanced to 4.1% from 3.9% while the participation rate was steady. The number of people considered officially unemployed increased by 22,000.

“This is another sign of moderation in jobs demand,” said Diana Mousina, deputy chief economist at AMP Ltd. “I still don’t think that you can justify a near-term rate cut right now because the labor market still looks tighter than before the pandemic. It’s loosened, but not enough to get worried about.”

NAB’s Tapas Strickland noted the labour market was still tight and said the central bank would likely wait for next month’s data before drawing any firm conclusions. “If the lift in the unemployment rate is sustained, then that would suggest a softening in the labour market is occurring faster than the RBA’s track, which could give the RBA greater confidence in their forecasts of inflation heading back to the mid-point of the band,” said Mr Strickland.

But frankly, the numberwanging is all over the shop.

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Its Edwin’s Monday Evening Property Rant!

Another dose of reality from our property insider Edwin Almeida. What political games are being played at the moment, and how is this influencing markets, which according to some are taking off again. Or does it depend on where you look and who is buying. How big is the housing crises now? Will any of the “solutions” being discussed really assist?

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Today’s post is brought to you by Ribbon Property Consultants.

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Which Households Are Hurting The Most – According To The RBA?

Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock was back in front of the bright lights, appearing at a House Economics Committee Hearing on Friday.

I have selected the edited highlights in this show, from the 3 hours of questions, and have included some of her statements. While she didn’t add a whole lot more to what she said at Tuesday’s press conference, she emphasised two points that should give pause to those expecting multiple rate cuts this calendar year.

The first was in response to a question on inflation expectations: by the time inflation gets back to the midpoint of the target band of 2 per cent to 3 per cent, as required by the RBA’s new mandate – which occurs some time beyond the middle of 2026 on the RBA’s latest forecasts – inflation will have been outside the target range for four years, which is right on the edge of what the RBA will tolerate.

The second was on productivity.

But she also touched on the risks in the forecasts, the impact of the Bank of Mum and Dad, and other distributional impact questions across households. Frankly, I found this unconvincing. So the think the RBA has much to do to gain a better set of insights into the current state of play!..

Let me know what you think in the comments!

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Is Negative Gearing The Next Target?

Interesting to see the momentum now turning to discussion of whether the Government intends to tackle negative gearing having U-turned on the tax cuts.

As The Conversation put it, there are two things the prime minister needs to get into his head about tax. One is that saying he won’t make any further changes no longer works. The other is that negative gearing doesn’t do much to get people into homes.

Australia’s Treasury has begun publishing estimates of the cost of the present unfocused system of negative gearing. Its latest, released last week, puts the cost at $2.7 billion per year, to which should probably be added a chunk of the $19 billion per year lost as a result of the capital gains concession.

Albanese is normally cautious. But as he is showing us right now with his rejigged Stage 3 tax cuts, there are times when he is not. If he really wants to throw everything he has got at building more homes, he knows what to do.

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