Advertisement

Adelaide continues to resist major housing price slump

The property market continues its orderly descent from COVID-induced highs but Adelaide has largely resisted the downturn.

Nov 01, 2022, updated Nov 01, 2022

Another 1.2 per cent was shaved off national dwelling values in October, marking the sixth monthly decline in home prices as measured by CoreLogic.

Sydney and Melbourne may have been the trigger points but home prices in Brisbane are falling the fastest, dropping nearly two per cent for the month.

Adelaide prices fell only 0.26 per cent for the month while Perth’s eased just 0.21 per cent.

The overall rate of decline has been slowing month to month, with the 1.2 per cent drop following a 1.4 per cent decline in September and a 1.6 per cent fall in August.

The PropTrack home price index, another home price tracking indicator released on Tuesday, actually found home prices stabilising in October.

Its index shows national dwelling values fell just 0.06 per cent in October, the smallest fall since house prices started cooling off in May.

But CoreLogic’s research director Tim Lawless says it’s too early to call the end of sharp price declines.

“With Australian borrowers facing the double whammy of further interest rate hikes along with persistently high and rising inflation, there is a genuine risk we could see the rate of decline re-accelerate as interest rates rise further and household balance sheets become more thinly stretched,” he said.

Mr Lawless said the housing market had been cushioned by there being fewer listings than normal as well as the tight labour market, substantial savings buffers and large numbers of households on fixed-rate home loans.

InDaily in your inbox. The best local news every workday at lunch time.
By signing up, you agree to our User Agreement andPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

PropTrack senior economist Eleanor Creagh agreed that further rate rises would continue to put downward pressure on house prices but said there was evidence the downturn was starting to ease.

“The RBA appears done with frontloading the tightening cycle, slowing the pace of its hikes,” Ms Creagh said.

“This may give prospective buyers a confidence boost. Evidence buyers were taking advantage of the less competitive conditions.”

She also said the tight rental market, low unemployment and housing supply pressures would also put upward pressure on home prices.

Local News Matters
Advertisement
Copyright © 2024 InDaily.
All rights reserved.