Home building beats expectations in 2017/18
Recently released ABS building activity data for the June quarter of 2018 has shown better-thanexpected results.
HIA Economist Diwa Hopkins said that Australia’s home building industry beat expectations in starting construction of 228,480 homes in the 2017/18 financial year.
“This represents a 3.3 per cent increase on home starts in the previous financial year,” Ms Hopkins said “It turns out that quite a significant amount of homes started construction in the March quarter of this year – more than what the ABS had initially estimated, particularly in the east coast’s multi-unit segment of the market.
“The commencement of well over 200,000 homes in 2017/18 will support overall activity in the residential construction sector into 2019, as the building of these homes progresses through to completion.
“While we are expecting new home building conditions in 2019 to remain healthy, today’s figures also indicate that
the home building cycle is cooling.
“Total housing starts declined over the June 2018 quarter, by 5.9 per cent – detached house starts declined by 3.8 per cent, while multi-unit home starts fell by 8.2 per cent,” Ms Hopkins added.
“Tightening credit conditions, falling home prices in the major markets and fewer people now entering the country have been in play for at least 12 months now and this is now taking effect in bricks and mortar construction activity.
“Today’s backward-looking results follow recent forward-looking indicators – ABS Building Approvals, HIA New Home Sales and the AIG-HIA Performance of Construction Index – and these are all pointing to further declines in new home building in 2019,” concluded Ms Hopkins.
Total housing starts in 2017/18 increased in Tasmania (29.4 percent), South Australia (19.4 per cent), Victoria (18.9 percent) and in the Australian Capital Territory (4.1 percent). Housing starts declined in the remaining states: Western Australia (-8.7 percent), the Northern Territory (-8.6 percent), Queensland (-6.3 percent) and New South Wales (-4.3 percent).