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ANZ economists see regional house prices as likely out-performing those in the country's largest city in the near term

Property
ANZ economists see regional house prices as likely out-performing those in the country's largest city in the near term

ANZ economists believe the Auckland house market is set for a period of under-performance relative to the rest of the country.

Chief economist Cameron Bagrie, senior economist Mark Smith and senior rates strategist David Croy, writing in the the ANZ's latest Property Focus publication, say that over time Auckland house prices have tended to out-perform the national average.

"But there is a cycle; Auckland can under-perform too. We appear to be entering such a stage," they say.

They have done detailed crunching of historic figures around the country, looking at some of the key drivers of regional house prices, with a view to seeing whether they have common linkages and if the recent buoyancy in Auckland property prices will filter through to other regional areas.

"Our analysis suggests price rises in Auckland tend to lead those in the rest of the county, and should support prices in regional areas, with nearby regions already benefiting. But regional determinants matter too."

The economists say that since the mid-1970s the ratio of Auckland house prices to the rest of the country shows an upward trend (see graph below), with annual nominal house price growth averaging 9% in Auckland since then versus around 7% for the rest of the country.

"This is likely (in part) to reflect Auckland’s stronger population growth and geography. In the early 1990s, the median Auckland dwelling price was about 30% higher than the median nationwide dwelling price; now it is about two-thirds above the nationwide median. A similar trend is evident for Auckland residential section prices, which are now around 85% higher than the nationwide median.

"The mid 1990s housing boom was more concentrated in Auckland, whereas the 2003/07 boom was more acute in other regional areas. Auckland house prices sometimes underperform the rest of the nation. That tells us that market forces still work. You can’t have unfettered rises in one region or yields driven lower without investments starting to look attractive elsewhere. Eventually capital and people are attracted to places or regions that offer better valuations and yields."

The economists say that "a clear upward trend" is noticeable of late courtesy of the recent strength in Auckland prices, and this ratio is now well above its longer-term trend.

"If this relationship holds, it suggests Auckland house prices are due for a fall relative to other regional areas. That doesn’t mean Auckland house prices need to fall; they simply need to underperform."

The economists say whether Auckland is classed as an international city and prices are being driven by more global factors (including historically low global borrowing costs, and offshore demand) is a "moot point".

"In our minds domestic fundamentals matter and will have the final say. At present, Auckland prices are above their long-run trend and are due for a pullback relative to other regions.

"The rubber band that is Auckland property valuations relative to domestic fundamentals – as well as their price in relative to prices in other regions – looks tight. Either Auckland prices fall or prices in other areas catch up, or both."

'Ripple effect'

Bagrie, Smith and Croy say that, anecdotally, prices in nearby regions are already picking up as the “ripple effect” of higher Auckland house prices spread, with the RBNZ's proposed modifications to the LVR criteria (via increasing investor deposit requirements to 30% for Auckland purchases) likely to further underpin the relative attractiveness of nearby regions.

"But valuation metrics will also be at play. With rental yields in Auckland sitting just above 3%, money is invariably attracted to higher-yielding alternatives.

"There may always be a gap between Auckland and the rest of New Zealand yield-wise (on the back of better expected capital gain in Auckland). However, that gap has boundaries and a stretch point. We appear to be hitting that point at present, just as we did in 2003."

The economists looked at the relationships between house price movements in the broad regional areas and potential determinants, including mortgage interest rates, regional residential consent issuance, net permanent and long term immigration into the region and regional economic activity (using the ANZ Regional Trends data) and they say this all revealed the following:

  • There is no clear link between house price movements and changes in regional economic activity. "We find, however, that changes in economic activity for Auckland and Christchurch tend to lead movements in house prices in these regions."
  • Movements in regional consent issuance tend to be contemporaneous with movements in nationwide house prices. Viewing the relationships by region indicates that house price movements in Auckland tend to lead movements in Auckland residential consents, whereas movements in consent issuance tend to lead movements in house prices in Christchurch and Wellington.
  • The strongest link between net PLT immigration flows and house price movements is in Auckland, with little evidence that net PLT immigration leads house price movements in other regions.
  • The lagged level of mortgage interest rates has the strongest negative link with Auckland house price movements, followed by the Rest of South Island and Wellington. Movements in nationwide house prices tend to lead changes in mortgage interest rates, with the strongest link from Auckland and Christchurch house price movements.

On the impact of net immigration, the economists say increases in it tend to flow through more quickly to Auckland house prices ("peak effect six to seven quarters following the shock") than for other regions.

"What is also evident is that the migration impact washes out after about four years in Auckland. Prices in the regions are also positively related to regional net immigration flows, but lower on average than in Auckland. We are interpreting this relationship as either evidence of migration causing a ripple-type effect to areas not directly impacted, or that the linkages are due to something we have not captured in our modelling approach.".

On the effects of interest rate movements, the economists say the peak impact from an interest rate move occurs after three to four quarters.

Full impact next year

"This implies the full impact of the June RBNZ interest rate cuts will not be fully felt until early next year."

Turning the equation around and looking at the impact of house price rise on interest rates, the economists say their research suggested that movements in Auckland house prices have historically tended to elicit a more significant interest rate response than for other regions. "No surprises there; the Reserve Bank watches them closely," they say.

"Given the recent uplift in Auckland prices, and the fact that our analysis shows that movements in Auckland prices tend to lead those elsewhere, the focus will be on the potential impact of current Auckland house price strength on prices in other regions. Simple equation estimates suggest that increasing Auckland prices will tend to permeate to the regions, with a lag of about three to six months depending on the region, but the impact is not one for one."

Bagrie, Smith and Croy say their regional analysis suggests increasing the supply of dwellings holds the key to putting a lid on prices.

"The impact on Auckland property values from increased dwelling supply is slower than for other regions but it eventually hits home. Crucially, the construction sector response should meet the regional and budgetary needs of the region and the key will be putting in place an affordable housing supply side response."

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32 Comments

Again, not common or even extremely rare, a working family can own their own house and a backyard in its country's most internationalized city.

Like it or not, apartments, the quality ones, are the way to go for AKL.

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People should not be forced into "cages" just so profit can be had from the import or export of human beings. (Aucklanders are not chickens! Or maybe they are?)

A real reassessment of what existing Aucklanders need should be done, not just what politicians want so they can keep growth numbers high.

In saying that once reality returns to the Auckland market again (and the now anticipated downturn arrives), it may just be possible for normal people to buy housing again! But don't let that mask the fact that fundamental issues need looked at.

My prediction is that the cheaper outer suburbs are going to get absolutely hammered in this downturn. Particularly South Auckland.

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Ppl in NZ would not be forced into 'cages', so to speak, if there were any competition in the construction sector in NZ.

Quality apartments with good height, good floor plan, good location, low price, and low body corp are really desirable.
Unfortunately, no company in NZ are able to build such apartments, not without any external competitions. So, if there were any one force NZer into 'cages', I think it should be NZer themselves.

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If we're incapable, why don't we let the Japanese do it for us?

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Auckland has aspirations to be the world's "most liveable city" - seems some of the recent migrants to NZ have a different definition of "liveability" to most Kiwis - we don't consider shoe-box sized apartments to fit the definition.

I've lived in other "internationalized" cities - London, Hong Kong etc. If you think it's acceptable to simultaneously sleep within 3 metres of your fridge, oven and TV whilst also peering into your neighbour's living room then go live there. You're welcome to that lifestyle and quite why you want to export it here is a bit beyond me - that is not how I want our cities to end up and is counter-productive to the aspiration of being "liveable".

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I lived in Japan and never had to sleep with the fridge or peer at my neighbors. It was never oppressive. The Japanese use of and appreciation of how to use space is far more sophisticated than that of NZ.

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not all the cities have to be like London or Hong Kong and their shoeboxes.
Auckland does not need that much density.

Why not comparing it with apartments in Madrid, Rome, Paris, Seattle, Tokio.. whatever other city.

A 100 square metre 3 bedroom apartment is more than enough for most of the people. But quality ones, not the ones you find in Auckland..

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To muntijaqi and J.C., yes it would be far better of looking to how the Japaneses build given that the average size of a new Japanese house is about 100m2 compared to the UK's 70m2 (smallest in Europe), and the Japanese home is cheaper on a medium household income to house price.

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Without getting too personal .. but you've been here a few years now .. have you got out and about yet .. spent some time in our rural areas? .. engaged with some of our rural folk? .. engaged with some non-jafas .. have you immersed yourself in our culture yet? ... spent some time on a marae yet? .. discovering our way of life and our aspirations .. what is important to us?

it seems not - so what were your primary reasons for coming here?

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xingmowang, I somewhat agree with you on two counts. Good quality apartments are likely to appeal to younger generations who have plenty of alternative entertainment to mowing lawns and doing gardening. Separately some earlier apartments in Auckland haven't been flash in terms of size and quality.
My understanding is that there are in planning stages a good number coming along. Exactly how good, and how price competitive, time will tell, but apartments along main transport routes do seem a key answer to a housing shortage.

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Well, check out this largest development in the city of sails. http://www.wynyardcentral.co.nz According to the "Herald", units start from about $550,000 (from 60sqm), just small change for most of us... and they don't advertise prices on the project website. Probably because a decent 90-100sqm apartment will be around 800-900K. How does that compare to the value of a stand alone house? It just doesn't to me, and many others. Thats why so many apartments are bought for rental investments. Not to mention the number of apartment blocks with horrendously expensive body corporates that are just a big racket for a few large real estate service firms. (ever tried to have some influence in one of those and inject some common sense?). Coming from europe, I can't ever see myself buying one here...

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Yep I agree with your prediction - and I'd add that the highest of the high end suburbs will also get hammered. So the bottom will fall out of the very bottom and the very top.

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Dairy prices also fell in 2003 and we had 3 OCR cuts in 2003... Auckland had risen in price and was significantly above the 'regions'.. Immigration had boomed for 2 years following 9/11... Almost every factor is the same.. except this time there is added fuel for regions with kiwisaver and FHB grants (adding a fixed amount into peoples pockets for deposits, which as a % has a far greater impact on lower priced regions), and RBNZ restrictions on Auckland investors literally forcing them into the regions where values make sense on a price to earnings basis. Add the special effect for uni cities of the recent immigration policy changes allowing international students to work and it's a situation close to Warren Buffets 'fish in a barrel, with the water drained first'.

Have a look what happened to palmy house prices 2003-2007.. they doubled. In 4 years time would you imagine a 3 bed on full section in highbury would set you back 350k (the current limit for kiwisaver withdrawals/FHB grants)? Compared to whats happened it Auckland this is very realistic. Buy yourself some rentals already.

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Not sure that this downturn is arriving any time soon Chris J - if say 3 or 4 year fixed mortgages are available soon at less than 4% - perhaps even as low as 3.5% people will be under no real pressure to sell. The net migration boom is likely to continue combined with the lack of new construction etc, etc prices likely to level off rather than collapse. I remember BH predicting in December 2008 - "I have been expecting house prices to fall 30 per cent over the next couple of years from their peaks of last November and to take another decade to recover to those peaks." He was very wrong. So if prices in central Auckland only dropped around 15% in the GFC when interest rates were 8% then how likely is it that we will see prices drop 15% again? Even if they dropped 30% now they would still be higher than the 2007 peak. In the GFC there was a credit crunch whereas now the world is awash with cash so don't really see a protracted slump ahead for property - maybe just a levelling off or slight dip before it takes off again. None of these economists have a reliable track record with any of their predictions over the last 8 years. Barfoots had a strong sell rate at their auctions today - surprising given the international turmoil that has unravelled this week.

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whereas now the world is awash with cash

Is it, though? Significant cash reserves are I think the preserve of the uber rich. Perhaps you might mean the world is "awash with credit"?

And even if credit is freely available to the dwindling number of those not maxed out presently, what makes you think credit conditions will remain loose forever, or even in the near term?

The event that set off the previous "credit crunch" and the resultant GFC was swift and unpredicted. So many toxic assets on the books out there that interbank lending just stopped dead in its tracks. Seems to me we could identify any number of potential similar events which have the potential to spark an identical episode - only many predict this time the event will be bigger, the effects will be more widespread and the means to recover will be far more complex (i.e., take longer to resolve globally).

I just don't see anything that suggests stability - anywhere.

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Peak oil == "what makes you think credit conditions will remain loose forever, or even in the near term?"

is why.

Four things have a massive effect on an economy; spending, interest rates, debt and transport energy. Since energy input is going to be volitile, un-predictable and cripplingly expensive at times and even rationed, a functional ie growing ever economy isnt possible.

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Across the board falls are never huge (we had about 10% in the 2008 slump didn't we?), but individual sales can have enormous price movements, especially in areas that rapidly rose and where most of the neighbours are able to see at lower levels when the buyers dry up.

People must remember the 1998-2001 period when prices even in Auckland fell, then there was 2008-2011. (Charts may show it as flat but in reality many homes fell in price).

But this time is different?? Yeah right! Or maybe it is different because the boom has been bigger so will the bust?

Given 40% of buyers are investors and the yields in Auckland are absolutely terrible and houses even nice well maintained homes are not particularly easy to rent. It is going to be easy for the buyers to dry up, even if migration mushrooms.

We have recently sold one in an average part of Grey Lynn for just shy of 1.3, as it was only a 2 bed, the rent was only acheivable at about $500pw and it was a struggle at that. A 2% yield? That is unsustainable.

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But take investors out of the picture, combined with higher unemployment, reduced migration and (some) increased supply? Perhaps not a crash but certainly a long lower flat period ahead. I wouldn't invest now. Would you?

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I tend to agree with you Bigblue...

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There might be some price adjustment but overall you have captured it well Bigblue! There are lots of sour grapes who either missed out, sold out too soon or can't afford to enter into Auckland property ladder keep barking or praying for a huge collapse. There are no real long term investment alternative to housing at the present moment and those who have lost quite a bit in stock market will be back in housing to boost put the rate further.

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Try telling this to Matthew Gilligan of GRA accountants in auckland (or any of their employees) who are still of the view 'auckland grows at 15%, regional towns dont grow'. 4.5 years to go before I can cash in my 5 year bet (PN vs. Pt Chev), looking forward to it MG.

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I had a go at him about such comments a wee while ago here on interest.

I think part of the boom out south is due to hoards of his acolytes indebting themselves to the eyeballs.

Will be interesting to see what happens to his cohorts when the music stops. History always repeats.

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The GRA guys are extremely heavily invested in Auckland property themselves so it's a case of talking up their own book.

The advice they give can not be independent and without conflict of interest because of this.

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Double post.

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always unnerving when the photo used for real estate articles has your house in it. well, was our house. just sold. no mortgage any more. hooray!

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This is interesting. Apparently some people wouldn't bet on inflation any time soon.
Belgium just received a 50 million EURO loan to 100 years at 2,5% interest.

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.co.nz/2015/08/unidentified-inves…

Auckland house prices will go down more strongly than softly. It won't be long until many "investors" realize it's better to sell now than later and use the cash for something else.

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For what, though?

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Authentic samurai swords - unbelievable capital gains and very liquid investments :-).

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and if the market tanks on them you can always use them for seppuku, or is that what you meant by very liquid investment :-)?

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You've been watching too much Vikings :-). Different culture - same gore.

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In term of Auckland housing, for now the river of gold will continue to flow forever..

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