Million-dollar suburbs soar in wake of Aussie housing boom

epa04491646 A view of the skyline of Brisbane from a ferry in Brisbane, Australia 16 November 2014. World economic leaders are in Brisbane to attend the G20 Leadership Summit. The summit aims to stimulate growth and employment worldwide. Heads of state and government will also discuss the fight against the terror militia IS as well as the Ebola epidemic.  EPA/LUKAS COCH AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT

 

Bloomberg

The number of Australian suburbs where homes command a median A$1 million ($762,000) price
has surged in the wake of a four-year long housing boom driven by declining interest rates and demand
from investors. Suburbs nationwide where the median value is at least A$1 million jumped 29 percent to 613 in the year ended June, and more than doubled over the past three years, according to a report from real
estate research firm CoreLogic
Inc. Thursday.
“The data highlights the bracket creep that has occurred over the housing growth cycle, and how housing affordability in New South Wales (Sydney) and to a lesser degree Victoria (Melbourne) has deteriorated,” Cameron Kusher, a research analyst at CoreLogic, said in the report. Home prices nationwide have soared almost 40 percent from a low in May 2012, underpinned by investors, who faced with low returns from other asset classes took advantage of record low interest rates and a favorable tax system for landlords to pile into the property market.
New South Wales state, where Sydney is located, has just over 68 percent of all national suburbs with a median home value of at least A$1 million, up from 60 percent in 2008 Victoria state, with Melbourne as
the capital, increased its proportion of million-dollar suburbs to almost 17 percent from about 14 percent
in 2008. The proportion for Queensland and Western Australia declined as the end of the mining investment boom depressed home prices
in those states.
Surging prices have dented affordability and prompted banks to tighten lending criteria, with
the pace of price growth moderating this year. Still, mortgage rates at
the lowest in more than five decades are seen supporting demand going forward.
The Reserve Bank of Australia on Tuesday cut its benchmark interest rate by a quarter point for a second time this year, to a record 1.5 percent, and Australia’s four major banks passed on a portion of that to their mortgage customers.

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