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Roost home loan affordability for typical buyers

19 July 2010

This report is a monthly assessment of home loan affordability for a typical buyer*. (This is a companion report to the Roost home loan affordability report for first-home-buyers.)

To find where you can buy and still keep your mortgage payments affordable, see our new calculator here >>> To assess Rent-or-Buy affordability, see this Report here >>>

The Roost home loan affordability index for June 2010:

It now takes 61.8% of one median income to pay the mortgage on a median priced house purchased in June, up from May’s 61.4%. A typical buyer is assumed to be in the 30-34 age group.

This index was 56.1% a year ago and 63.3% five years ago. The affordability index reached its highest point of 83.4% in March 2008.

Essentially the median income for the typical buyer is not high enough to buy a median priced house, even with a 20% deposit. However, they may find the lower-quartile priced house is affordable (check our first-home buyer series). It is also true that a couple/family with more than one income may find the median house price is affordable. (Check house-hold income section below.)

Deposit

The standard buyer index is calculated assuming that the house buyer has already has a 20% deposit. Based on current income and house prices it will take an individual 8.6 years to save the 20% deposit as now required by most banks.

Key drivers of home loan affordability:

House prices

The median house price was $352,500 in June, up from $350,000 last month. The median house price was $340,000 in June 2009 which puts annual growth at 3.7%. Five years ago the median was $284,500.

Dwelling sales in June were 4,575, down from May’s 5,206, and it is now lower than the 6,040 sales twelve months ago, and way lower than the 8,025 sales five years ago.

New Zealand house prices in March

Month (change)

Year (change)

Median

$352,500

0.7%

3.7%

 

 

After-tax income

The median weekly take-home pay for a typical buyer was $756.30 in June, up 2.5% from the $737.65 in June 2009.

Five years ago, median weekly take-home pay was $618.69.

Disposable Income (wages minus mortgage payment)

Weekly disposable income was $288.67 in June, which is $35.19 lower than the $323.86 in June 2009 (and compares with $291.52 one month earlier). This measure shows that the typical buyers’ income is just too low by itself to afford the mortgage payments on the median priced home .

Take-home pay (wkly)

A month ago        (ch)

A year ago            (ch)

Wages

$756.30

$755.46

$737.65

$18.65 (2.5%)

Disposable Income

$288.67

$291.52

$323.86

$35.19

 

 

 

Interest rates and mortgage payments

Interest rates decreased slightly. The average bank interest rate for a 2-year fixed rate mortgage was 7.19% for May, 94 basis points higher than the 6.25% twelve months earlier.

Mortgage rate and payment (wkly)

A month ago (ch)

A year ago             (ch)

2 year fixed-rate

7.194%

7.185%

6.252%

 94 basis points

Mortgage payment

$467.64

$463.94

$413.80

$53.84 or (13.0%)

 

 

Household affordability:

Household income is a key criteria for lending institutions. We have established a set of standardised household profiles, and these can be used to check affordability.

Based on our standard household profile, it now takes 41.4% of the median take-home pay to service a mortgage of a median home purchased in June. Median-priced housing is barely affordable for families in New Zealand, even when both adults work.

This is down from 41.1% in the previous month, May. A year ago, it was 37.2% - five years ago it was 41.5%.

The profile we use for a standard buyer household is one adult male working full-time, one adult female working 50%, and one child aged 5 years.

Refer to our Median Multiple reports for a reconciliation of this report to the internationally comparable benchmarks, by city.

Details of our household profiles, the data sources, and the methods used, are set out in the Notes section of this report, below.

 Full regional reports are available below:
 

- New Zealand (159kb .pdf)
- Northland (159kb .pdf)
- Auckland (159kb .pdf)
- Auckland Central (159kb .pdf)
- Auckland North Shore (159kb .pdf)
- Auckland South(159kb .pdf)
- Auckland West(159kb .pdf)
- Waikato and Bay of Plenty (159kb .pdf)
- Hawkes Bay and Gisborne (159kb .pdf)
- Tauranga (159kb .pdf)
- Taranaki (159kb .pdf)
- Manawatu and Wanganui(159kb .pdf)
- Wellington region (159kb .pdf)
- Wellington City (159kb .pdf)
- Wellington Hutt Valley(159kb .pdf)
- Nelson and Marlborough (159kb .pdf)
- Canterbury (156kb .pdf)
- Christchurch (156kb .pdf)
- Central Otago Lakes (159kb .pdf)
- Otago (159kb .pdf)
- Southland (159kb .pdf)

 

Regional home loan affordability comparison:      
mortgage payment as a % of weekly take-home pay      
  Jun-10 Jun-10 Jun-09 Jun-08 Jun-07 Jun-06
New Zealand 61.8% 56.1% 77.7% 82.6% 68.6% 63.3%
Northland 53.7% 55.9% 75.5% 80.9% 66.1% 60.1%
Auckland 73.4% 67.5% 93.1% 98.7% 83.4% 75.8%
Auckland Central 77.4% 70.0% 99.0% 106.2% 86.0% 84.2%
Auckland North Shore 83.2% 72.7% 101.8% 107.3% 89.5% 78.9%
Aucklandl South 58.9% 53.0% 75.1% 79.0% 65.1% 57.9%
Auckland West 65.5% 58.3% 74.5% 87.6% 72.3% 68.8%
Waikato/BOP 59.9% 55.8% 76.5% 81.6% 66.7% 58.8%
Hawkes Bay 55.6% 51.3% 66.7% 71.2% 64.0% 59.2%
Manawatu/Wanganui 41.5% 39.5% 53.2% 64.6% 50.1% 40.4%
Tauranga 63.4% 66.3% 87.7% 94.7% 82.1% 73.2%
Taranaki 54.1% 48.3% 63.5% 69.1% 57.0% 51.0%
Wellington region 65.7% 57.3% 77.5% 82.8% 67.5% 61.8%
Wellington City 70.4% 69.2% 75.9% 85.5% 74.3% 65.7%
Wellington Hutt Valley 57.1% 47.9% 65.8% 73.6% 61.5% 54.5%
Nelson/Marlborough 66.8% 60.4% 83.9% 87.5% 69.0% 65.1%
Canterbury/Westland 58.7% 50.1% 70.7% 75.6% 62.7% 59.1%
Christchurch 64.6% 54.6% 76.1% 85.3% 68.9% 65.0%
Central Otago Lakes 78.4% 77.9% 126.8% 107.7% 93.6% 95.6%
Otago 43.0% 38.9% 55.5% 59.0% 54.2% 47.8%
Southland 32.6% 34.5% 45.6% 46.3% 34.2% 30.9%

 r = Revised, following Statsitics NZ LEEDS database update. See 'weekly income' note below.

Note to Editors:

This work must be referred to as The Roost Home Loan Affordability series. There are two related components – the Standard home loan affordability series, and the First-home-buyer home loan affordability series. They have both been produced by www.interest.co.nz. Please direct queries via email to info@interest.co.nz, or see our contact information below.

This research has been sponsored by Roost since July 2010. Roost, owned by AMP, is one of New Zealand’s largest independent home loan and investment property brokers with 16 franchisees nationwide. Roost offers to source the perfect loan for its customers from a panel of lenders, and insurance advice from Roost insurance specialists. Roost was established in 1996. For more information please visit www.roost.co.nz .

Sources / Definitions / Methodology

*a typical buyer: An individual in the 30-34 year old age group who buys the median house price with 20% deposit.

Interpreting the Index:
The home loan affordability index measures the proportion a weekly mortgage payment is of weekly take-home pay (for a median priced house). An index measure is generated for each region, and nationally. We calculate, but do not publish, this index using other various mortgage interest rate terms.

Interpreting the Household Income Models:
A mortgage is ‘affordable’ when the mortgage payment is no greater than 40% of household weekly take-home pay. The value of the mortgage is based on the rules below (see Home Loan).

Weekly Income:
From the July 2007 Report onward, the source on which we base our estimates of weekly income, is now the LEEDS (Linked employer-employee data survey) data from Statistics New Zealand.

The standard home loan affordability report is based on the LEEDS data for the 30-34 age group.

Income tax rates from IRD are used to calculate a take-home pay (which is the LEEDS-based data net of the specific income tax rate).

Home Loan: (Median house price less a 20% deposit)
Mortgage repayments are based on the value of the home loan, paid weekly for 25 years, using the 2 year bank average interest rate. The home loan is assumed to be a standard table mortgage, where both interest and principal is repaid in a fixed weekly payment made in arrears. The repayment is calculated using the tools at https://www.interest.co.nz/calculators/mortgage-calculator

Mortgage Rates:
Average mortgage interest rates are sourced from www.interest.co.nz. These averages are for banks only as banks have 90%+ of the mortgage market. Affordability calculations are done for mortgages at the floating rate and one year through to the five fixed-rate terms. In this report, the two-year fixed mortgage interest rate is used. This is, and has been the most popular term. However, the market is shifting to longer term rates, and the index reviews allow for keeping track of affordability issues as this shift happens.

House price data:
Median house prices are as reported by the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand. Although the REINZ series is more volatile than the QV equivalent, there is a highly positive correlation between the two series. The REINZ series is more current and offers an earlier indication of market trends.

Saving Rates:
Average savings interest rates are sourced from www.interest.co.nz. These averages are for banks only, and use the 90 day term deposit rate. Saving calculations take into account the individuals marginal tax rates as defined by IRD.

Household affordability:
Household affordability is calculated in the same way as individual affordability except instead of individual income, household income is used. The household income for a standard-buyer household is made from 1 full time male median income, 50% of a female median income, both in the 30-34 age range, plus the Working For Families income support they are entitled to receive under that program. This standardised household is assumed to have one 5 year old child.

Disclaimer
IMPORTANT – PLEASE READ

No reader should rely on the contents of this report for making a specific investment or purchase decision. The information in this report is supplied strictly on the basis that only overall market trends are being reported on, and that all data, conclusions and opinions expressed are provisional and subject to revision.

If you are making a specific investment or purchase decision, you are strongly advised to seek independent advice from a qualified professional you trust.

The conditions and disclaimers set out at https://www.interest.co.nz/terms-conditions are applicable to this report as well.

This report is made available on these terms only, and JDJL Limited or www.interest.co.nz or Roost is not responsible for any actions taken on the basis of information in this report, or for any error in or omission from this report. 

Contact
For more information, contact

Bernard Hickey
Managing editor,
www.interest.co.nz
JDJL Limited
206 Jervois Road, Herne Bay
PO Box 47-756, Ponsonby
Auckland, New Zealand

Phone:  (09) 360-9618
Mobile:  021 866-051
Fax:       (09) 360-9319
Email:   bernard.hickey@interest.co.nz