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Housing boom rolls on

June 19, 2021 BY

Melbourne has seen five per cent rise is housing values year-on-year to May.

HOUSING markets around Australia continued to surge in May with CoreLogic’s national Home Value Index up 2.2 per cent over the month.

The rise in May was a stronger result compared with April at 1.8 per cent, but weaker than the 32-year high recorded in March when values surged 2.8 per cent.

Research director at CoreLogic Tim Lawless.

CoreLogic’s research director Tim Lawless said that growth conditions remained broad based both geographically and across the housing types and valuation segments.

“Values were up by more than 1 per cent across every capital city over the month, with both house and unit values lifting across the board,” he said.

“Of the 334 SA3 sub-regions analysed by CoreLogic, 97 per cent have recorded a lift in housing values over the past three months.

“Such a synchronised upswing is an absolute rarity across Australia’s diverse array of housing markets.”

For the second time in three months, growth conditions in capital city home values outpaced the regional markets.

The combined capital city index rose 2.3 per cent in May compared with a 2.0 per cent rise across the combined regional areas.

Across the capital cities, the monthly change in dwelling values ranged from a 1.1 per cent rise in Perth through to a 3.2 per cent jump in Hobart.

Across the non-capital city regions, conditions were more diverse. Regional NSW led monthly gains with 2.5 per cent, while values in regional WA had the weakest result at -0.1 per cent.

Mr Lawless reaffirmed the fundamentals driving strength in the housing market remain in place.

“The combination of improving economic conditions and low interest rates is continuing to support consumer confidence which, in turn has created persistently strong demand for housing,” he said.

“At the same time, advertised supply remains well below average. This imbalance between demand and supply is continuing to create urgency amongst buyers, contributing to the upwards pressure on housing prices.

“Despite the consistently strong headline results, the underlying trends have shifted over the past year.

“The most expensive end of the market is now driving the highest rate of price appreciation across most of the capital cities, whereas early in the growth cycle it was the most affordable end of the market that was the strongest.

“From a geographic perspective, it was the smaller capital cities that led the housing market out of the COVID slump, but now Sydney has risen through the ranks to record the largest capital gain over the past three months with values up 9.3 per cent.”

Although housing values are now rising the fastest once again in Sydney, at least in trend terms, the annual growth rate is generally higher across the smaller capitals, as well as regional New South Wales and Regional Tasmania.

Darwin cracked the 20 per cent annual growth barrier in May, with values now 20.3 per cent higher over the past 12 months. For Darwin dwellings, this is the strongest annual gain on record.

Housing values across regional New South Wales are up 18.6 per cent while in regional Tasmania values are 18.1 per cent higher.

At the other end of the spectrum, the weakest housing markets over the past year have been in regional Western Australia at zero per cent, and also in Melbourne with 5.0 per cent where the extended lockdown has created a more significant drag on the annual rate of growth.