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Australian housing costs rival New York’s, but boom may be ending

A view of Dover Heights and neighbouring areas of Sydney, where house prices have fallen after years of increases.

A view of Dover Heights and neighbouring areas of Sydney, where house prices have fallen after years of increases. Photo: Getty

The home wasn’t perfect. The two-bedroom townhouse lacked parking and a backyard. Its proximity to a major road and a train station made for noisy evenings.

But like many young Australians, Georgia Blackie felt she needed to buy it or rent for the rest of her life.

She lives in Melbourne, one of the world’s wildest and most expensive real estate markets. The values of dwellings there have risen by more than 50 per cent in the past six years alone.

In Sydney, Australia’s other big real estate capital, the increase has been even higher. The two cities are among the world’s least affordable for housing, according to one survey, worse than famously pricey places like New York and London. Mortgage debt puts Australian households among the world’s biggest borrowers.

Lately it has cooled off, though, and people like Ms Blackie may pay the price.

She and her partner closed on the townhouse in August for $720,000. But since the market’s peak in November, neighbourhood home values have slipped about 6 per cent.

“If property prices do go backward,” said Ms Blackie, a 31-year-old lawyer, “where does that leave you?”

A real estate bacchanalia in recent years in Sydney and Melbourne turned some home owners into millionaires and left many millennials believing they would never be able to afford homes, sometimes leading to rifts between the two groups. Now the market’s party is taking a pause.

sydney streets

A roundabout in southern Sydney. The city, along with Melbourne, has long been a centre of fevered real estate buying and selling. Photo: Getty

Nobody is predicting an American-style housing crisis just yet. In fact, many economists predict that housing prices will soon rebound.

But a sustained slump could crimp consumer spending and pressure home owners who borrowed too much under generous mortgage terms at a time of stagnant wage growth. Global interest rates are rising too, which means many Australians could be facing higher interest payments, thanks to the popularity of variable [adjustable-rate] mortgages.

If many households are forced to sell, “to me that’s the biggest match that could ignite things,” said Richard Holden, a professor of economics at the University of New South Wales.

While price increases elsewhere in recent years have been more modest, Sydney and Melbourne account for the lion’s share of Australian real estate.

They make up about 40 per cent of the population and a majority of the property market value. Home values in both cities dropped last year, in some places in Sydney by more than 10 per cent, according to CoreLogic, a property data provider. So far this year they have dropped more than 2 per cent in Sydney and almost 2 per cent in Melbourne.

The decline has a number of causes, including new restrictions on foreign buyers, which hindered wealthy émigrés and investors from China. But a major factor is that Australians probably could not take much more. Prices, many experts say, simply rose too high too quickly.

“We are on the edge of a precipice,” said Martin North, principal analyst for Digital Finance Analytics, an independent research and advisory firm.

“All of the forces that have driven the home sector and the debt sector higher in the last 20 years are all coming to a critical inflection point.”

cranbourne

New homes in Cranbourne, a suburb of Melbourne, in January. Photo: Matthew Abbott / NYT

All of this has taken some air out of what some experts describe as a bubble, as a recent Saturday-morning auction in the Sydney suburb of Ryde showed.

The owners of a three-bedroom villa there were hoping it would fetch $1.25 million. In June 2017, as many as 90 per cent of homes put up for auction each week were sold. These days, less than half are selling.

When the auctioneer asked for an opening bid, he received only tight-lipped smiles and an awkward silence. A kookaburra cackled. No sale was made that day.

“It’s a bit nerve-racking,” said Chris Jabbour, a young real estate agent who welcomed people through the door before the auction. “You don’t really know what’ll happen next.”

So far, the economic damage has been minimal. Mortgage delinquency rates were largely stable last year, according to S&P Global, a ratings firm, though they are expected to rise this year. Moody’s Analytics, a financial intelligence firm, forecasts that home prices will resume rising by year’s end.

Still, signs of stress are showing. Mr North estimates that of 3.5 million mortgages where the owner lives in the home, almost a third of the households have incomes close to or less than their expenditures. He predicts that at least 50,000 homeowners may default in the next 12 months.

The long run-up in housing prices mirrors Australia’s boomtime economy, which has not seen a recession in more than a quarter-century. Demographics helped Sydney and Melbourne in particular, as the cities attracted both Australians and immigrants.

The run-up has put local home buyers under pressure. After Switzerland, Australia has the highest ratio of household debt to economic output among a group of nations that includes the United States, Europe, China and other Asian countries, according to the Bank for International Settlements, an organisation that links up central banks. About one-quarter of Australian households have less than one month’s extra put aside in savings to make the next mortgage payment, the country’s central bank said in February.

Domain, an Australian real estate website, found in June that the average Sydney couple would take nearly nine years to save for a 20 per cent deposit on an entry-level home near the city’s central districts.

“Almost everywhere you look, you can see icebergs,” Mr North said.

Australian officials have taken notice. Last year, financial regulators announced new lending restrictions aimed at mortgages that allow borrowers to pay only interest and put off repaying the loan itself. A government-backed banking commission this year has unearthed questions about mortgage vetting practices at some banks, prompting a few to review their policies.

That has helped tame prices. Some middle-class suburbs in Sydney have seen declines of more than 10 per cent and in Melbourne more than 6 per cent since the market’s peak late last year, according to CoreLogic. According to data from the REA Group, which operates Australia’s largest real estate website, the average number of people looking per listing has dropped by nearly a quarter over the past year.

“I think it’s just hit a price point that people were uncomfortable with,” said Nerida Conisbee, the chief economist of the REA Group.

What happens next could depend on interest rates. While Australia’s central bank has kept rates low, a few local banks have raised mortgage rates slightly. It is not clear what the country’s four biggest banks — National Australia Bank, Commonwealth Bank, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group and Westpac — will do. The four were responsible for over four-fifths of all housing loans as of March this year.

“The air comes out of the bubble slowly,” said Terry Rawnsley, an economist for SGS Economics & Planning, an urban planning firm.

Real estate agents are preparing for a tough road ahead. “It used to be a cash and dash,” said Charles Baynie, a real estate coach, referring to the ease with which properties were snapped up. “Now it’s not.”

Meanwhile, some first-time buyers are wondering whether housing will become affordable again.

“I guess I’ve just taken that thought of eventually having my property and put that in a box in my mind that says ‘unattainable,’” said Siobhan Kranz, 30, who lives in Melbourne.

“There’s a level of resentment that’s grown with that,” she said, “that I find hard to shake.”

-The New York Times

Isabella Kwai reported from Sydney, and Adam Baidawi from Melbourne. Justine Landis-Hanley and Adella Beaini contributed reporting from Sydney.

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