Hotspotting
One of the many ways media misinforms Australian consumers is their misunderstanding of the difference between building approvals and actual construction of new dwellings. Right now, at a time when we have major dwelling shortages and construction costs are so incredibly high, there is a very important distinction between the number of dwelling approvals and the number of homes actually being built. The difference between the two is quite stark and it speaks to the biggest single problem amid the housing crisis – approvals often are not translating into actual construction of homes, because...
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The Great Australian Dream still exists, it’s just that - for many - it now means owning an apartment, not a house with a white picket fence. As property prices continue to grow, the dream of owning a freestanding house has morphed into the dream of owning an apartment - for more and more Australians. Apartment living is no longer just a financial choice, but a conscious decision to seek out a different way of living - a more affordable and low-maintenance lifestyle. The percentage of Australians who live in a freestanding house has been declining since the beginning of the new...
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Brisbane was one of the nation’s boom markets in 2024 and likely to do even better this year. The price data shows that Brisbane delivered a strong performance last year, both with house prices and in particular unit prices – but was third in the capital city growth rankings behind Adelaide and Perth. Figures from PropTrack and CoreLogic show Brisbane house prices overall were up 10% last year and unit prices around 15%. In 2025 we expect Brisbane to have another strong year and to overtake those other cities to be the national leader on price growth. ...
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🏡 Australia's Housing Crisis: Causes & Solutions With housing affordability at record lows and supply failing to keep up with demand, how did Australia's property market reach this crisis point? More importantly—how do we fix it? In this special episode of The Property Playbook, Tim Graham is joined by an expert panel to tackle one of the most pressing issues facing Australian homeowners, investors, and renters: 🎙️ Panel Guests: ✅ Michael Sukkar – Federal Shadow Housing Minister ✅ Kelly Ryan – CEO of the Real Estate Institute of Victoria (REIV) ✅ Terry Ryder –...
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Some investors are attracted to the cheap house prices and very high rental yields in resources sector towns but recent events in two of the nation’s iconic locations demonstrate why this can be a strategy fraught with peril. Hotspotting methodology dictates that a diverse economy is a core factor in any location we are willing to recommend – which means locations dominated by one industry sector seldom make it to our hotspots reports. A country town solely reliant on agriculture, a coastal enclave where everything depends on tourism and mining towns are all places we shy...
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I sometimes despair for Australians trying to make sense of real estate markets, when the standard of analysis and commentary in news media is so poor. Knee-jerk responses to short-term data sets from economists, journalists and often from the big-name research houses create a mass of confusing, conflicting and contradictory commentary. The commentary around price data is the worst example of this. For a long time, the biggest problem for consumers trying to make sense of market events has been commentators putting too much importance on short-term results. ...
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Regional Queensland had a pretty good year for price growth in 2024 but I’m predicting it will have an even better one in 2025. There’s mounting evidence that the combined weight of internal migrants moving to Queensland and investors increasingly pivoting from Western Australia to Queensland will drive significant price uplift this year. In 2024, according to PropTrack figures, the median house price for Regional Queensland increased 10%, which was well above the national average (4%), and better than our three biggest cities, but was slightly below the level of growth achieved in...
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Since the start of the pandemic in 2020, many of Australia’s property markets have experienced some extraordinary price growth. Many locations, both city-based and regional, achieved unprecedented price increases with median house and unit prices soaring as demand hit new highs. Where once a million-dollar house or unit median was unusual, that recent growth launched many locations into that club for the first time. As of January 2025, there were 1,194 suburbs or towns with a median house price or median unit price of $1 million or more – 50 more than in September 2024. These figures show...
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Was the Federal Treasurer being serious when he suggested that investors pass on the new interest rate cut to tenants in the form of cheaper rents? Has Jim Chalmers lost the plot completely or was he making a shallow pitch to voters on the eve of a Federal Election? To suggest that investor owners are in a position to hand out financial benefits to tenants because of this one, very small, isolated reduction in their costs suggests that Chalmers is either divorced from reality or he’s having a cheap shot at landlords to win favour with renters and maybe a few extra votes. I have to say that...
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One of the most significant housing stories in the past year has slipped under the radar of news media, with very little commentary. The latest official data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows that it now costs over $500,000 to build the average house in this country. That’s the cost of construction of the dwelling and doesn’t include the land price. Given that the price of residential land is also escalating to record price levels, the reality is that the typical house and land package in a capital city is beyond the reach of most young buyers. This, in...
info_outlineWas the Federal Treasurer being serious when he suggested that investors pass on the new interest rate cut to tenants in the form of cheaper rents?
Has Jim Chalmers lost the plot completely or was he making a shallow pitch to voters on the eve of a Federal Election?
To suggest that investor owners are in a position to hand out financial benefits to tenants because of this one, very small, isolated reduction in their costs suggests that Chalmers is either divorced from reality or he’s having a cheap shot at landlords to win favour with renters and maybe a few extra votes.
I have to say that the more I see Chalmers in action the more I am convinced that he is one of Australia’s slimiest politicians.
Has the Federal Treasurer forgotten that this isolated, not-to-be-repeated-any-time-soon interest rate drop was preceded by 13 interest rates rises – and then more than a year of persistently high interest rates?
Is he unaware that, in addition to paying the massive hikes in loan costs, which still remain prohibitively high, property owners have also had higher taxes, higher council rates, higher insurance premiums and higher maintenance costs.
Properties that paid their own way (in other words, the rent covered all the costs of ownership) prior to May 2022 when the first interest rate rises happened, have long since ceased to be cashflow positive or cashflow neutral.
Rental properties that previously paid their own way have become businesses that lose money week after week. Owners are having to put in part of their weekly wages to prop up rental properties, because the rent doesn’t come to covering it.
Many owners have sold up and left the rental property business because they could not afford to keep going – keeping in mind that most owners are mum-and-dad investors on average incomes and can’t afford to lose money week after week because of the repeated interest rate rises all that occurred while Jim Chalmers was Federal Treasurer.
And this small interest rate reduction, which is no thanks to Chalmers and his government, does not change that situation.
Chalmer by name, but certainly not by nature.
One of the nation’s news media outlets responded to his comments by interviewing small investors who own one or two properties and have been struggling with the high costs of ownership.
One of them said the first interest rate cut in more than four years would save him about $100 a month on an investment property and he commented. “In the grand scheme of things, it’s a small saving. Any suggestion that mum-and-dad investors should pass that on to tenants, is absolutely ridiculous.
“As investors, we’re already paying so much to hold our property. Land tax has gone through the roof if you’re in Victoria, along with skyrocketing insurance costs, council rates and compliance.
“We get a measly 0.25 of a percentage point rate cut, and we get asked to pass that to tenants. It’s simply a ridiculous suggestion, given that everyone who has a mortgage, including us landlords, have been hurt by the 13 rate rises in the past three years.”
Couldn’t agree more.