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Saturday, August 18, 2012
Home Owners Forced to Take Super - Australia Mortgage
HOME owners have raided their superannuation funds of a record $100 million in last-ditch bids to avoid foreclosure, new government figures have shown.
The surge in mortgage-holders seeking emergency access to their savings has alarmed housing and social welfare groups, who warn many families are still struggling to meet loan repayments despite steep cuts in the interest rate
With distressed owners receiving an average of $15,250 each, there are also concerns some super accounts could be drained of more than a third of their value. The number of households in serious financial trouble has worsened despite mortgage lending rates falling about 1 per cent in the past six months and nearly 3 per cent since their peak in mid-2008.
Figures obtained by The Sun-Herald showed 6500 home owners were given emergency access to their super last financial year to prevent an imminent foreclosure.
A Commonwealth Department of Human Services report found $99.38 million was released, up 25 per cent on 2010-11 and well above the disbursements in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
It also marks the third year in a row that the number of people applying for, and being granted access to, their nest-egg has increased.
A campaign manager for Australians for Affordable Housing, Sarah Toohey, said years of house price growth had seen debt balloon and forced households to devote an unsustainable amount of income to meeting mortgage repayments.
''It's alarming and it shows that housing affordability is about more than just interest rates,'' she said.
''The sheer size of what people have to borrow to get into the housing market now really puts household finances under strain.'
Monday, June 11, 2012
Top Ranking Hotel Accommodation Gladstone, Queensland
5 of the Top Ranking Hotel Accommodation providers in Gladstone, Queensland
Rydges Gladstone
100 Goondoon Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4970 0000 • rydges.com
Xenia Central Studio Accommodation
166 Auckland Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 2022 • xenia.net.au
Toolooa Gardens
79/83 Toolooa Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 2811 • toolooagardens.com.au
Quality Inn Harbour City
20-24 William Street, Gladstone QLD 4701
(07) 4976 7100 • qualityinn.com
Harbour Sails
23 Goondoon Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 3456 • harboursails.com.au
Metro Hotel and Apartments Gladstone
22-24 Roseberry Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 4711 • metrohotels.com.au
Rydges Gladstone
100 Goondoon Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4970 0000 • rydges.com
Xenia Central Studio Accommodation
166 Auckland Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 2022 • xenia.net.au
Toolooa Gardens
79/83 Toolooa Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 2811 • toolooagardens.com.au
Quality Inn Harbour City
20-24 William Street, Gladstone QLD 4701
(07) 4976 7100 • qualityinn.com
Harbour Sails
23 Goondoon Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 3456 • harboursails.com.au
Metro Hotel and Apartments Gladstone
22-24 Roseberry Street, Gladstone QLD 4680
(07) 4972 4711 • metrohotels.com.au
Hotels Gladstone Interactive Map - Gladstone Hotels, Queensland
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Sunday, June 10, 2012
Sydney's Housing Market to Continue to Grow
Sydney is Australia's most populous city and its housing sector offers investors unique opportunities with the security that comes with investing in a large and rapidly expanding market.
Property prices in Sydney have increased 25 per cent in the last four years, during which many other housing markets around the world have stagnated or even gone backwards.
The reason that Sydney's housing prices have continued to rise is simple - more people want to live there. Famous for its landmark Harbour Bridge and Opera House, Sydney is the business and financial capital of Australia, with an ideal climate and a relaxed yet cosmopolitan lifestyle.
Sydney has nearly five million residents and its annual population growth rate of 1.6 per cent is higher than the Australian average. It is also higher than that of any major western city outside Australia, yet less than half of this increase comes from births.
Most new Sydneysiders are overseas arrivals who come to Australia to start a new or better life, seeking employment or education opportunities for themselves or their children. They have created a steady demand for around 30,000 more dwellings each year, pushing up prices and making Sydney the most expensive city in Australia to buy a house.
The median price of a Sydney house is now around A$620,000 (S$786,740) and it is rising. Landed properties can be purchased on the outskirts of Sydney for around half this amount, but they are located far from the city centre. Sydney's idyllic harbour side location brings problems, as much of the land is locked away in parks or reserves and there is less available for housing. The urban footprint has spread as far south, north and west as there is land available.
It is almost impossible for overseas arrivals to buy a home until they settle and establish themselves, which can take many years. This has led to a rise in Sydney's rents, which are higher than any other major city in Australia.
High rents and prices have changed Sydney's landscape. They have led to the abandonment of the dream of a landed home for many young Sydneysiders and led to a boom in apartment living. Over half of Sydney's dwellings are apartments or "home units" as the locals call them.
The new medium and high-rise apartment blocks contain gymnasiums, swimming pools and garden barbecue areas. The units are fitted out to attract renters, while their design lowers maintenance costs for investors. Many of the suburbs where this transformation is occurring - such as Pyrmont, Ultimo, Camperdown, Double Bay and Broadway - are located close to the central business district and in the urban centre itself.
What makes these dwellings ideal for investors is that prices for home units are still less than 70 per cent of those of similar sized houses.
The Sydney inner urban market is unique because there are fewer development projects in the pipeline than there are in other cities such as Melbourne even as the rental demand is far higher. Rents in these areas are escalating as a result and housing investors from Singapore can buy off-the-plan units with confidence, knowing that both the rental yield and the value of their investment are likely to rise in the coming years.
Property prices in Sydney have increased 25 per cent in the last four years, during which many other housing markets around the world have stagnated or even gone backwards.
The reason that Sydney's housing prices have continued to rise is simple - more people want to live there. Famous for its landmark Harbour Bridge and Opera House, Sydney is the business and financial capital of Australia, with an ideal climate and a relaxed yet cosmopolitan lifestyle.
Sydney has nearly five million residents and its annual population growth rate of 1.6 per cent is higher than the Australian average. It is also higher than that of any major western city outside Australia, yet less than half of this increase comes from births.
Most new Sydneysiders are overseas arrivals who come to Australia to start a new or better life, seeking employment or education opportunities for themselves or their children. They have created a steady demand for around 30,000 more dwellings each year, pushing up prices and making Sydney the most expensive city in Australia to buy a house.
The median price of a Sydney house is now around A$620,000 (S$786,740) and it is rising. Landed properties can be purchased on the outskirts of Sydney for around half this amount, but they are located far from the city centre. Sydney's idyllic harbour side location brings problems, as much of the land is locked away in parks or reserves and there is less available for housing. The urban footprint has spread as far south, north and west as there is land available.
It is almost impossible for overseas arrivals to buy a home until they settle and establish themselves, which can take many years. This has led to a rise in Sydney's rents, which are higher than any other major city in Australia.
High rents and prices have changed Sydney's landscape. They have led to the abandonment of the dream of a landed home for many young Sydneysiders and led to a boom in apartment living. Over half of Sydney's dwellings are apartments or "home units" as the locals call them.
The new medium and high-rise apartment blocks contain gymnasiums, swimming pools and garden barbecue areas. The units are fitted out to attract renters, while their design lowers maintenance costs for investors. Many of the suburbs where this transformation is occurring - such as Pyrmont, Ultimo, Camperdown, Double Bay and Broadway - are located close to the central business district and in the urban centre itself.
What makes these dwellings ideal for investors is that prices for home units are still less than 70 per cent of those of similar sized houses.
The Sydney inner urban market is unique because there are fewer development projects in the pipeline than there are in other cities such as Melbourne even as the rental demand is far higher. Rents in these areas are escalating as a result and housing investors from Singapore can buy off-the-plan units with confidence, knowing that both the rental yield and the value of their investment are likely to rise in the coming years.
Saturday, February 4, 2012
It's Going to Be the Year of the Unit - Apartments Sydney
New or old, apartments will be a popular choice for Sydneysiders in 2012.
It's just possible that apartments, especially those at the cheaper end, are one bright spot in Sydney's real estate market.
Prices generally for units have performed better than those of houses during the past five years, according to RP Data - with units recording average annual growth of 5.2 per cent compared with 3.6 per cent for houses. In the 12 months to December, RP Data reports unit prices rose by 0.9 per cent, while house prices fell by the same amount.
RP Data's senior research analyst, Cameron Kusher, says units should continue to do well this year and the more affordable ones should do best, even though there will be fewer first-home buyers now that the stamp duty exemption has ended for existing properties under $600,000 (it continues for new properties).
Kusher and other experts believe there are several reasons why units will continue to prove popular. The most obvious is that in a city as expensive as Sydney, they are the cheapest way into the property market. And with rents continuing to climb and the rental market in most suburbs very tight, this creates an incentive to buy.
A director of Richardson and Wrench, Peter Baldwin, believes the rising cost of renting makes buying a unit a much more sound option at the moment. ''It will be a price-factor thing,'' Baldwin says.
''The young ones won't be able to afford houses.''
A second reason for the popularity of apartments is that Sydneysiders are actually growing to like living in them.
''There's no doubt about it, people are embracing apartment living,'' says the senior economist at Fairfax-owned Australian Property Monitors, Andrew Wilson.
Prices
One of the biggest influences on the price of apartments (and houses) this year could be decided this week. The Reserve Bank is widely tipped to announce the first of several more cuts to interest rates on Tuesday, which, if banks pass the cuts on, would make prices more affordable.
The head of real estate strategy at Macquarie Capital, Rod Cornish, says if the cuts occur, affordability will ''be getting back to 2002 levels''.
''That is going to encourage the market to stabilise first and by the second half of this year, we think there will be some mild growth,'' he says. ''[That will be] predominantly growth in the mid-price range - $400,000 to $800,000 - because that's the one that will be most affected by the cuts.''
Baldwin says two rate cuts this year would be ''kindling to light the market'' and would ''really be a fillip to anyone'' buying. But he is not confident there will be much price growth. ''If it flatlines, that's the best possible result for the [apartment] market this year.''
Wilson predicts that if the economy continues to grow this year, the market for prestige apartments, along with the rest of the apartment market, should also start to pick up.
The managing director of Meriton, property developer Harry Triguboff, is more bullish. He thinks unit prices will rise by between 5 per cent and 6 per cent this year, although there will be nothing like a boom. ''Councils never approve enough [developments] so it will just go up gradually,'' he says.
On the lower north shore, apartments under $1.5 million will be popular because prices have stopped falling and buyers can see more chance for capital growth, says the principal of Belle Property Mosman, Tim Foote. ''I'm not predicting that prices are going to improve dramatically but I think there will be activity,'' he says. His office has already had strong interest from buyers this month.
The same is happening in the eastern suburbs and inner west. In Bondi, a unit that was for sale with expectations of $520,000 to $530,000 last year sold this month for more than $540,000, says the managing director of Morton and Morton, Ewan Morton. He says the start of this year has been much busier than that of last year, which he thinks is because buyers and sellers need to ''get on with things. They can't sit and wait forever.''
Baldwin predicts the most popular suburbs for apartments this year will be those close to public transport and within easy reach of the city centre, in particular Parramatta, Ashfield, Marrickville and the area from Epping back to Meadowbank. Buyers will mainly be owner-occupiers, especially upgraders, Cornish says, while investors will be more cautious until they see the market has stabilised and prices are rising.
New v old
The senior director of residential properties at CB Richard Ellis, Tim Rees, thinks there will be a lot of activity this year from buyers wanting affordable new and off-the-plan apartments up to $900,000. But the real ''market drivers'' will be several state government incentives that encourage buying off-the-plan or new dwellings under $600,000.
One of them, stamp duty exemptions for first-home buyers, has just ended for existing properties but they continue for new and off-the-plan dwellings. Another, the Home Builders Bonus scheme, gives all other buyers a full exemption on stamp duty for off-the-plan dwellings where construction hasn't started, or a 25 per cent discount where it has. However, this scheme finishes on June 30 and Rees says this will create a lot of demand in the first half of the year.
CB Richard Ellis alone has more than 12 off-the-plan projects earmarked for sale before July, all of which are in inner and middle-ring suburbs, such as Mosman, Homebush and Macquarie Park, Rees says. So far this year, they've sold 40 apartments, a better result than this time last year, which Rees says is also a reflection of interest rates coming down and a tight rental market.
The managing director of residential for Colliers International, Peter Chittenden, says there has been consistent interest in apartments under $600,000 in the past year, something he thinks will continue until closer to the June 30 cut-off. After that, some developers might extend this exemption themselves by offering to pay buyers' stamp duty to maintain their market share, Chittenden says.
Meriton, too, will be building several hundred more apartments this year than its usual annual total of 1500, Triguboff says, in areas such as South Sydney, Rhodes, Epping, Warriewood and St Ives.
Despite this strength in new apartment sales, Cornish believes there aren't enough being built to satisfy demand and there is ''not as much new construction as there has been in previous cycles''. Most of the demand will be for established apartments, he says.
Mani's ready to enjoy the calm after the storm
Mani Thiru has been in Australia for just six months but has decided now is the time to buy an apartment.
The British-born IT worker of Sri Lankan heritage spent the past decade in the Netherlands and came to Australia last year for work. Since arriving, she has lived in Mosman, near the beach.
She wants to buy in the same area and is looking for a one- or two-bedroom apartment, possibly with a view of the water, up to $600,000.
Thiru says she usually invests her savings in the sharemarket but economic uncertainty in Europe, cuts to interest rates here, plus the high cost of renting encouraged her to buy.
''The stamp duty concessions were in place last year, which I think inflated the prices, especially towards the end,'' she says. ''It felt like there was a lot of competition last year whereas now it seems to have calmed down.''
So far, Thiru has seen several units she likes, one of which is being sold by Adam and Jasmina Vernon of Belle Property Mosman.
Investors read the signs of the times
Just a few weeks into the year and already Bahar Etminan, the editor of fashion and beauty website rescu.com.au, and her town-planner husband were pounding the pavement looking to buy an investment property.
The couple, who have a young daughter, are renting in the eastern suburbs while they save up to buy a house. They have been investing in apartments every 12 to 18 months as a way of working towards this goal and already have several investment properties close to where they live.
They started looking for their latest purchase - a two-bedroom unit, possibly with a study up to $650,000 - towards the end of last year but Etminan says the time is right to buy because ''prices have come back a bit''.
They're looking in areas that they know - Woollahra and back towards Bondi Junction, Double Bay and Darling Point, all suburbs that are close to public transport, shops and have strong rental yields and good capital appreciation, she says.
''People are talking about the market getting lower and lower but, in the price range we're looking at, I don't think it's going to bottom out,'' Etminan says.
''It seems to be a fairly stable price range and also excellent for rental returns.''
It's Going to Be the Year of the Unit - Apartments Sydney
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