DFA Live Stream Q&A HD Replay – With Nucleus Wealth

This is the edited edition of our latest live stream with Damien Klassen.

Join us for a live Q&A as I discuss the current market environment with Damien Klassen from Nucleus Wealth. We will also discuss their property calculator, which I think is one of the best out there.

https://nucleuswealth.com/property-calculator

The macroeconomics of Australian residential property investing

Posted on by Damien Klassen

Before COVID-19 hit, Nucleus Wealth launched a property calculator. The idea I wanted to illustrate is that house prices are very sensitive to interest rates. So, with interest rates so low, property was going to be stuck in purgatory:

if the economy improved and interest rates increased then higher interest rates would cap property prices,

if the economy didn’t improve, then weak growth and already low interest rates would see property prices fall

I’ve changed my mind. Desperate times call for desperate measures. I’m pretty sure mortgage interest rates are going lower. Much, much lower. 

A mistake in our property calculator

In our house price calculator, we had a minimum mortgage rate setting of 2%. It should have been much lower. We just changed it to 0.5%. 

Impossible? Japan has mortgage interest rates below that. So does Germany. Ditto France. And there is a decent probability the rest of the developed world is destined for the same. 

It is already happening

The mechanism is already set up in Australia. The Reserve Bank of Australia has begun providing three-year funding to banks at 0.25% for mortgages. Banks can probably use this money to go below 2% for three-year loans. And that is just the beginning. 

 It started in April with an “initial” funding allowance for banks. Then an “additional” funding allowance. Now there is a “supplementary” one. 

There is clearly a risk of running out of adjectives to describe the bank funding. But there is no risk of running out of the desire to keep the property market ticking over with low interest rates and oodles of credit. The Treasurer’s announcement last week requesting banks to start lending irresponsibly confirmed that for anyone who still doubted.

Europe has already paved the way. The European Central Bank started with 0.1% funding for banks in 2014. By 2016 the rate was -0.4%. Now, -1.0%. Yes, the central bank will pay commercial banks up to 1% if they can just find someone (anyone!!!) who will just borrow the money.    

Wow – great news for bank investors, being paid to make loans!

Nope. It is the flat yield curve problem smashing bank profitability, I’ve posted about it several times. 

Don’t think of it as free money for banks. Think of it as life support so that the banking industry doesn’t collapse. 

European Banking performance

What does this do to residential property forecasting?

Keep in mind that I’m talking about forecasting residential property in aggregate – not individual houses or suburbs. 

There are significant links between property prices and the availability of debt. The financial crisis showed this internationally. The Royal Commission into banking showed this in Australia. When the amount of debt available rises, so do property values. When debt slows down, property values fall. 

The Federal Government is hellbent on forcing more debt onto borrowers. The Reserve Bank of Australia is providing the funding. Credit is available. 

I’m going to argue four other factors also constrain how high or low property prices can go. These are the four factors you can use to forecast property prices in our online calculator:

  1. Mortgage Payments to Rent: comparing the cost of a mortgage with the cost of renting the same house. By using this ratio to constrain house prices, we assume when the ratio gets high that people will prefer to rent rather than buy. 
  2. Mortgage Payments to Wages: assuming when the ratio gets high, people rent because they cannot afford to buy. 
  3. Property Prices to Wages: assuming when the ratio gets high, people rent because they cannot save enough money to afford a deposit. We treat this as less important than the above two ratios.
  4. Rental Yield: Rental yield is the annual rent divided by the property price. By using this ratio to forecast prices, you are assuming when the ratio gets low investors will not buy property as they are not getting a return that is high enough. 

Australia can be #1 in the household debt race

Strap yourself in for moral hazard. We already have the world’s 2nd highest consumer debt, about double most Eurozone countries. If interest rates can fall further and the shackles are off the banks for responsible lending, then who knows how much more indebted we can become?   

Investment Outlook

It is a fascinating showdown.

On the one hand, we have plummeting immigration, massive unemployment, eviction moratoriums to deal with, bankruptcies to deal with and a larger private debt burden that just about any other country.

On the other, we have a burning political desire to keep house prices high, pump more debt into the economy and a roadmap to much lower interest rates to help.

Property Investment Factors

As a reminder, in Perth from 2014 to 2018 we saw free credit (pushing prices higher) meet rising unemployment (pushing prices lower). Rising unemployment won:

Perth Housing Crash vs Sydney/Melbourne Boom

The best hope for housing bulls is that the interest rate falls come before the rent eviction moratoriums, interest repayment holidays and bankruptcies hit full stride. This might spark a mini-house price boom.   The worst outcome for housing bulls is that the interest rate falls don’t come until after house price falls gain too much momentum.     I think the negative outcomes are the default setting at this point, the burden is on the Reserve Bank and the government to do more. Either outcome is possible, but a negative outcome seems more likely.   Keep in mind that we have already locked ourselves into low interest rates for the next decade. If the government gets its wish for more household lending and lower interest rates, there may not be another interest rate increase for a generation. Or until a Modern Monetary Theory loving politician is elected.   

Appendix: Housing calculator valuation summary

The net effect (see individual city data below for more info) is:

The cost of a mortgage relative to the cost of rent is about average in Sydney and Melbourne. In Brisbane and Perth, the cost of a mortgage is cheap relative to the cost of rent. Both rents and mortgage costs are likely to continue to fall, but mortgage costs can fall further, improving affordability.

The cost of a mortgage relative to wages is about average in Sydney and Melbourne. It is cheap in other cities. The problem is two-fold: (a) wage growth is not going to be high (b) unemployment is high. A positive longer term sign for house prices, a negative shorter term sign. 

House price to wages are close to historical highs in every city except Perth.

Rental yields are close to historical lows in every city except Perth. Eviction moratoriums and rental declines are not helping investors. 

PS: I will be on the Digital Finance Analytics YouTube channel with Martin North in a livestream on at 20:00 on 29 Sep 2020 to discuss these factors and more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSTYE7WK92o

City Valuation Detail

The chart on the left shows how each of the ratios used for forecasting in the property calculator have changed over 40 years. The histogram on the right shows the distribution of the same ratio over the 40 years.

Sydney Housing affordability
Sydney Housing affordability
Melbourne Property affordability
Melbourne Property investment returns
Brisbane Property affordability
Brisbane Property investment returns
Perth Property affordability
Perth Property investment returns
Adelaide Property investment returns

Macroeconomic Factors

Australian Real Wage Growth
Australian Mortgage Interest Rates over time

Sources:

Nucleus Wealth has compiled this data using a range of different sources.

For property prices and rents we use a Domain for more recent data quarterly data, cross checked with SQM and Rismark to fill any short term moves. For older data we use Australian Bureau of Statistics data to fill timeseries.

For economic data we use either Reserve Bank of Australia or Australia Bureau of Statistics data. For older data we have had to estimate some factors due to differing definitions over time.

Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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