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Apart from the April 2020 lockdown, December brought the lowest month on record for new listings. Central Otago/Lakes District hits highest average asking price on record for any region – just shy of $1.6 million

Property / analysis
Apart from the April 2020 lockdown, December brought the lowest month on record for new listings. Central Otago/Lakes District hits highest average asking price on record for any region – just shy of $1.6 million
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The following press release was received from realestate.co.nz


As most Kiwis wound down to their summer break, the New Zealand property market followed suit. Despite the post-election optimism felt in November, this spirit didn’t extend into the festive period. December brought a 16-year low in new listings, excluding April 2020, when COVID-19 lockdown restrictions paused house listings. This amounted to less than half the number of new listings compared to the previous month.

The latest data from realestate.co.nz also indicates stock and average asking prices remained below December 2022 levels nationally.

Vanessa Williams, spokesperson for realestate.co.nz, says:

“The summer break brings a different rhythm to the property market. We typically see a natural slowdown as people focus on festivities, time with their loved ones, and getting away to the beach.”

Despite the holiday respite, some regional hotspots showcased a different story, which Vanessa explains is down to diversity within our market. For example, in sun-kissed Coromandel, year-on-year new listings were up 21.9%, stock was up 35.6%, and average asking prices rose above $1 million after a November lull.

“Regions like Coromandel often display a unique resilience during the holidays. The allure of beachside living and holiday homes tends to keep activity buoyant during this time.”

“Moreover, the surge in new listings in this region suggests vendors were capitalising on higher visitor numbers,” says Vanessa.

Santa brings record national new listing low

Festive cheer may have been high, but new listings hit a new low during December, down 6.4% year-on-year to 4,828 new listings nationally. This marked the lowest month on record, excluding the national COVID-19 lockdown period.

New listings in Auckland mirrored the national trend with a 16-year record low. Down 11.7% to 1,392 new listings, Auckland had fewer listings in December 2023 than in April 2020, when COVID-19 lockdowns restricted the market.

Vanessa says while it’s not unusual to see a December dip, the decrease is more significant than usual:

“The last time we saw levels like this was December 2019, when nationally, there were only 5,528 listings and just 1,422 in Auckland. It starkly contrasts the more than 10,000 new listings which hit the market just a month earlier in November.”

She adds that some vendors may be holding off on listing until the New Year because they aim to sell via auction, which is typically rare during the Christmas break. Selling via auction has been rising in popularity in recent months.

Across the country, 11 of our 19 regions saw new listings decline. The biggest decreases were in Gisborne (down 32.1% year-on-year to 19 new listings) and Taranaki (down 26.1% year-on-year to 136 new listings).

On the flip side, Coromandel (up 21.9% year-on-year to 117 new listings) and Marlborough (up 14.5% year-on-year to 79 new listings) saw the biggest increases.

“Like Coromandel’s sun-kissed beaches or Marlborough’s prized Sauvignon Blanc, vendor activity lit up the market in these regions during December,” says Vanessa.

She adds that the diversity among the regions highlights how different areas navigate the festive season.

National stock takes a summer dip, but some buoyancy remains outside of main centres

Down 4.6% year-on-year, national stock levels took a dip last month. This trend, typical during year-end celebrations, predominantly affected major centres like Auckland, Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Canterbury, and Otago. However, Gisborne had the biggest drop with only 74 properties on the market, a year-on-year drop of 30.6%.

Many places painted a different picture, with nine of our 19 regions seeing stock levels increase compared to December 2022. Coromandel and Central North Island led the charge with year-on-year stock increases of 35.6% and 27.1%, respectively. Stock also increased in Southland (up 17.3%), Northland (up 15.9%), Nelson & Bays (up 11.0%), Marlborough (up 7.9%), Taranaki (up 5.8%), Central Otago/Lakes District (up 3.9%), and West Coast (up 2.8%).

Vanessa says this highlights the various ‘microclimates’ within the New Zealand property market:

“While the main hubs experienced a typical seasonal downturn, the stock increases in regions like Coromandel and Central North Island show that seasons can affect regions differently.”

“While some areas hit pause for summer, others hit play,” says Vanessa.

Average asking prices are a mixed bag, driven by the regions.

December’s average asking prices were mixed, with regional New Zealand continuing to drive the market. Standing out amidst the holiday slowdown, Central Otago/Lakes District, Nelson and Bays, Taranaki, Wairarapa, and West Coast saw both month-on-month and year-on-year growth to average asking prices in December.

Central Otago/Lakes District also reached an unprecedented high in December, with the highest average asking price for any region of $1,590,855, a 16.2% year-on-year increase.

“Central Otago/Lakes District is a lifestyle region. Despite its distance from major business hubs, it boasts the highest average asking price in the country.”

“The average asking price in Central Otago/Lakes District is around half a million dollars more than in Auckland,” says Vanessa.

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20 Comments

Housing stock rises each year

This is ignored by articles

Listings and sales should be shown as % of stock to give time comparison 

Coromandel plainly selling to get away from slips and insurance problems 

Rising refix mortgages dragging fingernails off cliff this year. Plus China deflation force

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15

"Housing stock rises each year"

Errr, no, housing stock is down 4.6% compared to a year ago as per table .  Do you even bother reading the article before commenting?

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2

I think Mike means housing stock overall, not just those for sale.

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15

See comment below

Also your response is illogical since I would need to have read article to state what I did 

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1

Who lists going into Dec unless you really need to. Would only make sense in a holiday location to target visitors. Lawyers etc and banks are in more or less unavailable to boot.

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5

Got to love Vanessas bubbly enthusiasm. Could be holiday homes going on the block because 7% is a streeeeeetch?

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10

Record low listings doesn't exactly scream "forced sellers desperate to offload their houses".

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2

Agree Dr Y. But you just created your own narrative to put your reckon on. 

You also have record low listings in North America. And one of the reasons for that is many people cannot afford to move. They're trapped. 

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7

A bit like US Democrat supporters.....       

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2

Lol.

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1

Stressed sellers to scared to list as they increasingly realise they are the last parcel holder as the music stops.

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1

Massive listings Nov, less Dec, perhaps just noise or Nov stole from Dec this year....    I read more into number of sales and price paid at settlement...    some of the listings may just be try and get a high price hopium

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6

It's almost as if people have been on holiday...

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2

Nah, they are all waiting to board their planes going across the ditch!

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2

In the past 24 hours I've seen multiple new listings in blue chip Auckland locations where the sellers bought houses at the peak of 2020 -21 and they are now attempting to offload asap in 2024 at an auction. $10,000 + monthly interest payments are starting to break some folks. 

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6

got to think so investors putting 30k in a year going to bail as well

 

 

What if everyone over 50 wants to pull 40% of there equity out by downsizing at the same time.......

 

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4

Still lots of deluded vendors. I have noticed that when realtors list properties without a price i.e negotiation, deadline sale etc, more often than not their client is expecting a price far beyond the market value. So many listings of desirable houses sitting on the market for over 25 weeks. 

 

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3

Indeed. Burning time as cost of deb has increase almost 3x over the last two years. They should have taken the mad offers turned down in 2021. Oh well...

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0

Remember always this is a press release from www.realestate.co.nz.

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1

Indeed. Hopefully if an impartial view on real stats for the period. But wouldn't bet on it.

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0