Prestons Biggera Waters Footscray Annerley What a million dollars buys you in Australia

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Australians hoping higher interest rate rises would bring property prices down have little to celebrate with $1million still only fetching a modest house.

Just three years ago, $700,000 easily bought a house near a Gold Coast beach but prices in one suburb are still 40 per cent higher than they were three years ago – even during a downturn.

At a pinch, it was just enough for an outer suburban Sydney house or a home with a backyard near the city in Melbourne or Brisbane, provided someone was willing to buy something in need of renovation.

Now, those same category of properties are fetching close to seven figures, as professionals who could work from home relocated to the beach outside a big city or bought a bigger house in the suburbs.

This phenomenon was turbocharged after the Reserve Bank slashed interest rates to a record-low of 0.1 per cent and left them at that level for 18 months until inflation became a problem.

And with interest rate rises tipped to continue at least through next year, the typical house is becoming an increasingly unaffordable pipe dream for first-home buyers, because monthly repayments have climbed by a third in only six months.

Credit ratings agency Moody’s said rate rises had failed to make houses affordable, because values haven’t fallen enough.

‘While house prices are declining, rising interest rates over 2022 and any further rate rises in 2023 mean affordability for new borrowers is poor and will remain so over the next year,’ it said.

Prestons Biggera Waters Footscray Annerley What a million dollars buys you in Australia

A million dollars in Sydney still mainly buys a house a long way from the city despite recent price falls. Prestons (house pictured), 44km south-west of Sydney’s city centre, has a mid-point price of $969,555, CoreLogic data showed

A $1million home would now barely be affordable for a couple earning $150,000 between them, after seven interest rate rises reduced the lending capacity of the banks. 

Strong price rises, when interest rates were still at a record-low of 0.1 per cent, meant the downturn that started this year would be unlikely to undo those gains and make housing more affordable. 

Westpac is expecting Sydney and Melbourne house prices to plunge by 18 per cent in 2022 and 2023 as a result of rising interest rates.

ANZ is expecting capital city prices to fall by 18 per cent, from the peak in 2022 to the trough in 2023, before staging a 5 per cent rise in 2024, when interest rates start coming down again.

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Economists Felicity Emmett and Adelaide Timbrell said investors could be among the first to get back into the housing market.  

‘While we can’t discount the possibility of a sharper downturn, the tightness in the market evident in low vacancies and high rental growth suggests investors may chose to re-enter the market in greater numbers than we currently anticipate,’ they said.

Higher immigration would also underpin demand for Australian real estate after the Reserve Bank stopped raising interest rates.

‘Population growth is rebounding more quickly than expected,’ ANZ said. 

‘There is clear interest from overseas for housing in Australia, particularly from India.’

The Gold Coast has seen some of Australia's biggest increases with the median house price at Biggera Waters (pictured) in three years surging by 39.9 per cent to $955,150 from $682,665

 The Gold Coast has seen some of Australia’s biggest increases with the median house price at Biggera Waters (pictured) in three years surging by 39.9 per cent to $955,150 from $682,665

Before the pandemic in October 2019, Sydney homes with a backyard had a mid-point price of $918,314. 

Sydney, Australia’s most expensive capital city market, had a median house price of $1.243million in November, following an 11.9 per cent fall from the the peak in April because of rate hikes, new CoreLogic data showed.

Suburbs with a one million median price that were cheap in 2019

PRESTONS, south-west Sydney: $969,555 up 17.8 per cent from $823,158

FOOTSCRAY, inner-west Melbourne: $986,330 up 12.8 per cent from $874,236

ANNERLEY, inner-south Brisbane: $951,297 up 19.3 per cent from $797,257

BIGGERA WATERS, Gold Coast: $955,150 up 39.9 per cent from $682,665

MAROOCHYDORE, Sunshine Coast: $987,950 up 25.3 per cent from $788,721

CoreLogic data comparing median house prices in November 2022 with November 2019 

So a $1million house, while considered upmarket everywhere else in Australia, would be in the lower half of the Sydney market even during a downturn.

Prestons, 44km south-west of Sydney’s city centre, has a mid-point price of $969,555.

Prices have fallen by 7.8 per cent or $81,558 since peaking in April at $1.051million.

But since November 2019, the mid-point house price here has risen by 17.8 per cent or $146,397 from $823,158.

Nearby Casula, a short drive from the M5 and M7 motorways, has a median price of $984,876 – a 20.6 per cent or $168,062 rise compared with $816,814 three years ago.

Prices have fallen 8.8 per cent or $94,998 since peaking at $1.080million in May. 

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While Sydney house prices have risen sharply, suburbs near the beach in a similar price bracket have done even better. 

The Gold Coast has seen some of Australia’s biggest increases with the median house price at Biggera Waters in three years surging by 39.9 per cent or $272,485 to $955,150 from $682,665.

So the 13.1 per cent or $143,372 decline since the June peak of $1.099million has barely undone the gains of 2020 and 2021.

The NSW Central Coast an hour north of Sydney also had strong gains. 

Bateau Bay saw its median house price in three years surge by 33.6 per cent or $240,497 to $955,564 from $715,068.

So the 13.8 per cent or $153,345 drop from the April peak of $1.109million has not reversed the boom.

Melbourne offers much better value for those wanting a house near the city with Footscray having a median price of $986,330, and it's only 7.5km from the central business district

 Melbourne offers much better value for those wanting a house near the city with Footscray having a median price of $986,330, and it’s only 7.5km from the central business district

On the NSW far north coast, Ballina house prices have risen by 24.5 per cent or $174,709 in three years to $888,225 from $713,516.

But the town south of Byron Bay has suffered an 18.8 per cent or $205,790 decline from the $1.094million peak in April.

Where prices have fallen this year

BALLINA, NSW far north coast: Down 18.8 per cent or $205,790 from the April peak of $1,094,015

ANNERLEY, inner Brisbane: Down 18.4 per cent or $214,470 from the March peak of $1,165,767

TWEED HEADS, NSW far north coast: Down 15 per cent or $170,325 from the May peak of $1,132,567

Melbourne offers much better value for those wanting a house near the city with Footscray having a median price of $986,330, and it’s only 7.5km from the central business district. 

But prices here in three years have risen by a more modest 12.8 per cent or $112,093 from $874,236.

Prices have fallen by 8.7 per cent or $94,228 since peaking at $1.081million in March, before interest rates rose.

In Brisbane, Annerley has a median house price of $951,257, with this suburb of older Queenslander homes only 6km from the city centre.

Prices here have risen 19.3 per cent or $154,039 from $797,257 in three years.

But since the peak in March, prices have plunged 18.4 per cent or $214,470 from $1.166million.

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Across Australia, a $1million house would now barely be attainable for a dual-income couple, earning $150,000 a year between them. 

They would fall slightly short of getting an $800,000 loan with a 20 per cent deposit. 

A typical family that could borrow close to $1million just six months ago can now only get a loan for $781,200, leading to sharp house price drops with more pain to come.

Back in early May, when the Reserve Bank cash rate was at a record-low of 0.1 per cent, a couple with two children on a combined income of $150,000 could borrow a maximum of $995,800, a RateCity analysis showed.

In Brisbane, Annerley has a median house price of $951,257, with this suburb of older Queenslander homes only 6km from the city centre. Prices here have risen 19.3 per cent or $154,039 from $797,257 in three years

 In Brisbane, Annerley has a median house price of $951,257, with this suburb of older Queenslander homes only 6km from the city centre. Prices here have risen 19.3 per cent or $154,039 from $797,257 in three years

The latest November increase means this same family’s borrowing capacity would have fallen by 22 per cent or $214,600 drop since the Reserve Bank’s tightening cycle began in May.

Borrowers have, since May, endured 2.75 percentage points worth of interest rate rises, through seven consecutive monthly interest rate rises that have taken the cash rate to a nine-year high of 2.85 per cent.

This was the most in a row since the Reserve Bank began publishing a target cash rate in 1990, and almost every economist is forecasting an eighth increase next week. 

Lenders since November last year have been required to assess a borrower’s ability to cope with a three percentage point increase in variable mortgage rates under Australian Prudential Regulation Authority rules.

A borrower with an $800,000 mortgage has, since May, seen their monthly mortgage repayments surge by $1,118 to $4,193 – a 36 per cent increase from $3,075.

Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Philip Lowe on Monday apologised to borrowers who took out mortgages after he had repeatedly suggested the cash rate would stay on hold at 0.1 per cent until 2024.

‘I’m sorry that people listened to what we’d said and acted on that and now find themselves in a position they don’t want to be in but at the time, we thought it was the right thing to do,’ he told a Senate economics hearing on Monday.

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