Better localknowledge
Welcometo ourtimelycelebrationof aNew Zealandrealestateicon:the summerbach. It’ssafetosaythatmostKiwis dreamof owning aholidayhomebythebeach.Andour research intothe stateofthebachmarketpost-Covidshowsjust howmanyKiwis realisedthatdream.Therewas asurge insecond-homepurchasesin coastallocationsaround NewZealandin2020and2021, as buyers respondedto borderclosuresand record-lowinterestrates.
It’sclear fromtheprices beingpaidthatsomelocations aremorepopularthanothersandthattheluxuryendof thebachmarkethasdoneextremelywell.Forthose in the market, we’vealsoproduced ahelpfulguidetobuyinga holiday home.
Our finalPropertyReportof2022also contains ourendof-year reviewofthehousingmarket. We’veidentifiedthe winnersandlosersinwhathasbeen aturbulent12 months in realestate andgiven ourpredictionsfor2023.
AlsoinsidearethelatestsuburbvaluesforallofNew Zealand,providedbyourdatapartner,Valocity,and insightsandcommentaryfromindependenteconomist TonyAlexander,propertycommentatorAshleyChurch and mortgagebrokerRupertGough.
Keepintheknow!
Whenitcomestowritingarticlesaboutthe housingmarketanditsvarioussubcomponentsthereisatypeofsongbook fromwhichweeconomistssing.Whenan economyisjustcomingoutofadownturnwetalkabout theadvantagesforabuyerofcompliantvendors,low fixedinterestrates,bankswantingtogrowtheirbooks afteraweakperiod,probablysomeeasinginReserveBank mortgagerestrictions,andextrademandfromotherslikely tosooncomealong.
Whentheeconomyis chuggingalongstronglywe notethat demandishighandcapitalgains seemtobe easily occurring,plentyofpeoplehavejobs,butclouds aregathering.We’ll warnabouteventuallyrising inflation,risinginterestrates,thecheappriceshaving beenandgone,andtheneedforgreaterthoughttobe giventopotentialincomelossifandwhentheeconomy turns down.
risetooffsetthe higher costoflivingmeansinterest inpurchasing aholiday homeis likelyto stay strong throughtheperiodofeconomicchallengein2023.
Butthereisasecondnon-traditionalfactortotakeinto account.Thepandemichas made people reassesstheir lifestyles,theirlifegoals. Manyofusseetheopportunity tospend alotmoretimein aholidayhomethan previouslyenvisionedbecauseofthegreaterscopefor workingfromhome.
Infact,theoldequations of length of timetodrivetoa weekendhomeona Fridaynightthenbackon aSunday nightgetradically alteredwhenyoucan makethetrip atyourleisure on aWednesdayor Thursday andcome back maybeon aMonday –thoughstillwiththeusual limitationsforhouseholdswithchildrenatschool.
Therehasbeen astructural shiftupwardinthe feasibilityof owningandgettinggooduseoutofa holiday homefortensofthousandsofpeople.
We canaddina thirdfactor.Thepopulationis aging, andthepandemichas seenmanyolderpeoplesellup outofthe maincitiestoshifttothe regions. Thishas already producedunusualupwardpressureonnotjust regionalhousepricesingeneralbutprices forholiday homes. Becausesomeofthisbuyingwas ashifting forwardin timeofpurchasesthiscouldmean abit less thanexpectedBabyBoomer demandforholidayhomes inthenext coupleof years.
Thenwhentheeconomyisturningdown(now)wetalk abouttheuncertaintiesastowheninterestratestopout andatwhatlevels,howfarhousepricesmightfall(pure guessworkexperiencetellsus),whenlendingcontrols mightease,andtryourbesttogiveananswerwhen peopleaskwhenthemarketwillstartrisingagain.
Thetrouble withsuchanapproachthistimearoundis that oureconomy is experiencingsomeuniqueaspects neverseenbeforeduring adownturn andthatmakes forecastingextremelyfraught.Thebigdifferenceisthe labourmarket.The unemploymentratehas satat3.3% all year,businessesarehighlypessimisticyetplan hiring many more people,andthefeelingofjobsecuritywhich peoplehaveisunusuallystrong.
Thisisimportantintermsofsupportingthehousing market overalleven aspricespullbackfromtheabsurd levelsof2022.Itis alsoimportantin termsofsupporting the holiday homesmarket. Were theunemployment raterising firmlyas we haveseeninthepastwhen interestratesjumpupand sentimentis verynegative thentherewouldbefalling demandforholiday homes. Manypeople wouldbelookingto sellin factto freeup cashforeithertheir businessesortosupporttheirhome mortgageincase of redundancy.
Thistimearound thestrongexpectationpeople haveofkeepingtheirjob andsecuring adecentwage
Butoffsettingthisfactoristheextentofthewealthgain onassetsexperiencedbymanypeopleoverthepastfew years.Theunexpectedhikeinwealthfromhigherpricesfor sharesandpropertyisencouragingmanypeopletomake purchasestheymightotherwisenothaveconsideredwise.
Formanythishasmeantpurchasingaspaorengaging inhomerenovations.Butforothersithasmeantpaying alotlessattentiontothecostsofowningaholiday homethanwouldnormallybethecase.Peoplemaystill runthespreadsheetofmaintenancecosts,travelcosts, bankinterestsacrificedetc.Butwhensetagainstthe unexpectedwealthsurgeofrecentyears,especiallyfor peopleinthetraditionalholidayhomebuyingagegroup, thecostsgetdiscountedfairlyquickly.
Orinsimplerterms,insteadofcomparingholiday home running costswithexpectedincomepeople comparethemwith accrued wealthandthecoststhan paleintoinsignificance.
Thereare otherfactorstoconsidersuchas rising interestrates, recentlyslowpopulationgrowth,getting insuranceon properties near waterinfutureyears,and aprofitabilitycrunch formany smalltomedium-sized business ownersdue torisingcosts.Butallup,themild natureofthe slowing inNZgrowthexpected next year, thefirmlabour market, thewealthgains,working from home,andanagingpopulation, allsuggestacontinuing stronglevelofunderlyingsupportfortheholidayhomes marketin thecoming fewyears.
•TonyAlexanderisanindependenteconomics commentator.
Letusgetthebest result foryourvilla,bungalow, mid-century, apartmentormodernhome. Whatever yourhomeis worth,it’sworth choosingBayleys.
Bayleys Remuera 50 RemueraRoad, Auckland 09 5208888 I remuera@bayleys.co.nz
Bayleys St Heliers 421 TamakiDrive, St Heliers, Auckland 09 5750760 I stheliers@bayleys.co.nz
HOMEFORTHE
COASTALCOMMUNITIES upanddownthe countryarechangingshapewithCovid speeding uppeople’sdecisionstoeithermovetothebeachor buyaholidayhometoescapeto.
Thevirushasledtoshiftingpatternsof residency withagents reportinginsteadofthetraditionalheading offtothebachfromtownonaFridaynightthere’sagrowing trendofpeopleoptingtoliveatthebachandcommutetotheoffice.
AnalysisofNewZealand’sbachmarketbyOneRoofanditsdatapartner Valocityfoundanexplosioninsecondhomepurchasesincoastallocations inthemonthsafterthefirstCovidlockdown,withmorethan6000snapped upbyKiwiseagertobeclosetothebeachandthewater.
Theboominsales camehandinhandwith aboominbeachtown propertyvalues,withhouseprices in someofthemorepopularlocations risingbymorethan$500,000post-Covid.
James Wilson,headofvaluationsat Valocity,saysthedataandanalysis showsjusthowhotmanyofNZ’scoastalmarketswereaftertheinitial Covidlockdown.
“Manyhomeownerswereabletoutiliseequityfromtheirmainhometo leveragethepurchaseofasecondhome/holidayhome.Alowinterestrate environmentalsohelpedfueldemand,”hesays.
Wilsonadds:“The‘seachange’wasnotjust aKiwithing;this phenomenonwasalsoobservedinternationallyasthedesireto liveand
workfromcoastallocationsgrew,supportedbyincreasingworkfrom homeflexibilityofferedbymanyemployers.
“Interestingly,whilstsalesactivityhasslowedsignificantlyinmany coastallocations,wearenotseeingsignsofsignificantdownward pressureon valuelevels,headwindsarenotyetstrongenoughtopush themdown.
“Anecdotally,weare hearingofincreasedinterestlevelsduringearly spring,andwewillbewatchingcloselytoseewhetherthisinterest correlatestostrongervaluelevelsaswemovetowardssummermonths.”
LOCKDOWN EFFECT
Aconsequencehasbeenstandardsliftedinwhatwereoncepurely
Otherbigbuyersofholidayhomeshavebeenolderpeoplewho hatedbeinglockeddownawayfromtheirfamiliessomuchtheysold upandbought aplaceatthebeachwithineasy reachofchildrenand grandchildren.
Even grandparentslivinginidyllicholidayspotsliketheBayof
HOLIDAYS
Islandshavemovedtocoastallocationsfurthersouthtobenearfamily, determinednotto repeattheisolationtheyfeltduringlockdowns.
Agentsalso reportthebigdemandtheyhaveseenoverthelast fewyearsatsomeholidayspotshasmeantbuyingatthebeachisnot necessarily acheaper optionanymore.
Justtobuy abasictwoorthree-bedroomholidayhomebackfrom thebeachhashitthe$1m-plusmarkinplaceslikeCooksBeachonthe CoromandelPeninsulaandthatwon’thaveseaviews.Beachfrontthere, asinmanycoastallocations,isnowinstantlyinthemillions.
Formostpeople,beingabletodrivetotheirholidayhomewithina coupleofhoursisstillabigmust.ForCantabriansthatmightbeAkaroa; forAucklandersit’straditionallybeentheCoromandelPeninsulaor northofthecitytoplaceslikeOmahaand Mangawhai.
WithOmahabecomingthedomainoftheuber-wealthy(beachfront therecancost$7m-plus),Aucklandershavepushedfurthernorthto Mangawhaiwhichinturnhasmorphedfrompurely aholidayspottoa bustlingtownwithsubdivisionsandemployment.
Aresulthasbeenpeoplesearchingfurtherupthecoastinlocations like WaipuandRuakakainBreamBay –andRuakakaisbooming,says JoanneDews,ofBreamBayRealty.
ShethinkstheoncesleepybeachcommunityisprobablythefastestgrowingcoastallocationnorthofAuckland.“Peoplehavebeenbuying upbachesleft,rightandcentre. We havewaitinglistsforpeoplethatare
Dewson has also seen an increase in older people who weren’t able to go on cruises or travel overseas putting their money into beach properties so the whole family can come together.“They arethinking about not much point in having the money in the bank because it’s not earning any interest.”
She thinks Ruakaka has overtaken the Coromandel in popularity for Aucklanders, saying traffic-wise it’s easier to get to, and she says people who can no longer affordtobuy in Mangawhai can probably affordRuakaka.
Mangawhai is an example of aholiday destination which has turned into alifestyle destination, says Stephen Owles, from Bayleys Mangawhai. “We’ve learned alot over the last two years of how to work remotely so our influx of population and the way the region is developing is going to continuefor the next two to fiveyears at least.”
Mangawhaihasbecomepricey,though.A400-500sqmsectionwithout views is around half amillion dollars. The price doubles for aview and to buy right on the water,orone back from the beach, now costs $2m to $3.5m, alot of money for aholiday home.
OverthehillfromMangawhaiiscovetedLangsBeach,whichhasfew facilities but big, quality multi-million dollar homes. Owles says there’s along waiting list to get into Langs Beach so while few properties come to market when they do they sell quickly
Aucklanders after aholiday home also headed to the Coromandel in droves after Covid arrived. Chris Speedy,ofWhangamata Real Estate, says the market in the surf town was hectic after Covid arrived.
“Wefound alot of people, Aucklanders especially,weresick of the lockdown and wanted to get outofthere.”
The general consensus was if people had to be locked up they would ratherbelockedupattheseaside:“Thatwasamotivatorforsometoget aholiday home.”
LOCKDOWN EFFECT
Speedy has noticed new trends, saying people arestill transitioning out of thecities. Some arebuyingholiday homesaspermanenthomes by perhapsdownsizing or sellinguptheir Auckland property.“They got a practicestart at working remotelyoverCovid,” he says.
“There’s quite alot of people that will shoot up (toAuckland) for two days aweek or just shoot up for ameeting and if you time your run you’reonly acouple of hours away.”
Other people have aplan, Speedy says: “They arestarting the move now and buying something they can go ‘right, we can either do this up or they’ve got a2,3,4,5-year plan to transition here permanently.”
PeoplewhohavesoldupinAucklandarenotregrettingtheirdecision, either,Speedy says. “It’s moreonce they get herethey go ‘why didn’t I do it sooner?’.”
People from the Waikato and Bay of Plenty,including farmers, also like to buy in Whangamata.
FurtheruptheCoromandelPeninsula,CooksBeachhasalsoseen an increase in permanent residents who work remotely.“There’s definitely been amindshift Ithink, or areset,” says Merv Gardiner, branch manager of Richardsons Cooks Beach.
“We’ve definitely got morepeople wanting to buy abeach house especially at entry level, which now in Cooks is above $1m, which used to be probably half that three years ago.
“It’snotacheaperoptionnowthanAuckland,assuch,butitseemsto be amindset option Ithink.”
Cooks Beach has limited stock, however,soagain thereis awaiting list to get in and Gardiner says that’s especially at the entry level. “Just recently we sold aplace, two-bedroom older bach. It was tidy,good sectionbutnowaterviewsoranything,sleepoutdowntheback,andthat soldfor$1.2m–youwouldn’thavedreamtofthatpriceafewyearsago.”
Alot of the holiday homes in Cooks Beach arestill empty half the year but those who do live therepermanently often rent them out in peak times wherethey might fetch $400 anight. “Friends of mine built themselves alittle sleepout down the back. Thereare only two of them and so they go downthere and rent their house out for six weeks.
“You usually have alockable cupboardintherethat you put all your personal stuff in and just lock it which tenants can’t access,” Gardiner says.
Hesayspropertytypeshavechangedovertheyearswithdemandfor rough, old Kiwi baches petering out as people these days want modern, liveable holiday homes.
“I can remember going back 30 years we’d be renting out some pretty rough looking beach houses …nobody will rent that sort of property anymoresopeople have tidied their baches up and when they rent it’s maybe not five-star but it’s alot better than it used to be.”
While most buyers arefromAuckland or Hamilton and the Waikato, somecomefrommuchfurtherafield,suchasSouthlanderswhorecently bought there: “They wanted to get away from their cold winters.”
Butmostpeoplewanttobeabletodrivetothebachcomfortably,hesays.
PERMANENTSHIFT
Furthersouth,theKapitiCoastonthe
“WE FOUND ALOT OF PEOPLE,AUCKLANDERS ESPECIALLY,WERE SICK OF THE LOCKDOWN AND WANTED TO GET OUT OF THERE.”
CHRIS SPEEDY, WHANGAMATA REAL ESTATE
permanentsuburb.
ThatwashappeninglongbeforeCovidbutCovidledtoevenmore interestinthecommunitiesscatteredupthecoast,saysCeinwenHoward, directorofHoward&Co.
GrandparentsfromNewPlymouthorPalmerstonNorthhavebeen buyingtobenearerfamilieswholivein Wellington,andheragencyhas hadbuyersfromHavelockNorthinHawke’sBayandtheBayofIslands aswell.
“Iaskedthem,‘whyonearthareyoucomingdown?’andthesame answerfromeverysingleoneofthemwas‘ouradultkidslivein Wellingtonandwedon’teverwanttobesofarawayinlockdownagain’. It reallyaffected retiredpeople,theyfelt reallyisolated.”
Retiredpeopleonelectricbikeshavebecome acommonsightatthe beach,shesays.
Again,holidayhomesatplaceslike WaikanaeBeach,RaumatiBeach andParaparaumuBeachareboughttobelivedinpermanentlythese dayswitholderstylebachesmostlybeendemolishedtomakewayfor $2mor$3mhomes.“Orwe’vegotpeoplethathaveboughtthatwill retireorlivetherepermanentlybutnotatthemoment.”
LiketheeastcoastnorthofAuckland,buyersarespillingfurther northwithallthebeachcommunitiesgrowingaseachbecomesmore expensivetobuyin.
“Ourpricesarenottoodissimilarto WellingtonCity.You’dnormally cashupin Wellingtonandputmoneyinthebankandchangeyourcarthat’snot reallythecaseanymore.”
SOUTHISLANDBACHES
WellingtoniansoftenheadtoMarlboroughSoundstobuyholidayhomes, makingupabout20%ofthemarket,butthemainbuyersareCantabrians andotherSouthIslanders,saysGlennDickofMarlboroughBayleys.
Dicknoticed abiguptickininterestwhenCovid restrictionsstopped peopletravellingabroad,withhideawaysinplaceslikeQueenCharlotte Sound,KenepuruSoundandPelorusSoundallpopular.
He’snoticedfewerimpactsfromtheworkfromhometrendsaying bachesintheSoundsare stillpredominantlyholidayhomes,although thereare somepermanent residents,too.
Mostly,peoplearebuyingpropertiesastheyalwayshave,as aboltholetogotoatweekends,hesays.
Whilethereare stillsomeolder-styleKiwibachestobefoundthey arelessdesirable,withmosthomesnowfeaturingmono-pitched roofs, boardandbattencladdinganddouble-glazing.
Dicksaysthere’snotmucharoundforunder$500,000withthestarting pointaround$800,000or$900,000throughtothemillions –Bayleys agentssold ahomeonKenepuruRoadinBroughtonBayfor$2.255min January,andanotheratQueenCharlotteDriveinNgakutaBaysoldfor $2.295minApril.
WhilesomeCantabriansdodrivefivehourstogettoMarlborough Sounds,mostliketoonlyspendanhourorsogettingtotheirholiday home,saysJulieGraham,ofBayleysRangiora.
PlaceslikeMotunauBeach,ontheeastcoastjustoveranhourfrom Christchurch,areareaswhereboatiesgo:“Thetraveldistancefrom
Christchurchis reallyattractiveifyou’retowing aboat.”
BuyersforMotunauareusuallyfromChristchurchorthewider Hurunuidistrict,she says.
“They’llcomefromoverthehillfrommaybeCulverdenwayor somewherelikethat.Iftheyarerurally-based people butstillwanttobe bythecoastit’snotfartoputyourboatin –that’swhatitboilsdownto alotofthetime.”
AlsonearChristchurchisFrench-influencedAkaroa, atownonthe BanksPeninsulaknownforitsheritagebuildings.
Akaroaislargely aholidaydestination,saysChrisMangels,ofBayleys, butherethebachesareabitmorewell-heeledwithalotofheritagecottages andalsomodernbuildsalongstreetswithFrenchnames.
MostareownedbypeoplefromChristchurchorfrommid-Canterbury butMangelshasnoticed amarkedincreaseinAucklanderslookingto buy,somewith aviewto relocatingtherepermanently.
CovidputAkaroabackonthemap,Mangelsthinks:“Peoplewere stuckinNewZealand,weren’tthey,andtheytravelled regionallyand they realisedeverythingtheyneedisonthedoorstepanyway.”
CHANGEOFLIFESTYLE
Buyersarelookingatpermanentsolutionsforthefuture,hesays.“They maybe aholidayhomeintheshorttermbutdefinitelysomethingto spendmoretimeat,potentially retireat.Ifyoumoveto atownlike
Grab abach: SALESINNZ’SCOASTAL TOWNSAND SUBURBS
OneRoofandValocityexaminedsalesactivityandvalue movementin251beachandcostallocationsaroundNew Zealand.Theanalysiscoveredthefiveyearstotheendof June2022,andincludednonurbancentreswithmorethan 100residentialpropertieswithin800metresofthecoastline. Thetotalnumberofsettledsaleswas35,356.Ofthose,45% (15,997)were“secondhome”purchases-iepurchasesthat tooktheownerintothemulti-homeownercategory.
OverallsalesplungedatthestartoftheCovidcrisisto76but thenexplodedfollowingtheliftingofthelockdownrestrictions, withthemonthlyaverageforthesecondhalfof2020risingto justover760andtheshareofsecondhomepurchasesrising above50%.Salesdeclinedinthefirsthalfof2021astighter lendinglawsmadesecondpurchasesharderbutthetherewas abriefresurgenceinthemarkettowardstheendoftheyear. Salesvolumesnowarebelow20172019levelswithrisinginterestrates likelyakeyfactorintheoverall marketslump.
Bach hotspots
SALESINNZ’SCOASTAL TOWNSAND SUBURBS
TheOneRoof-Valocityanalysislookedatthepercentageof dwellingsownedbymulti-homeownersandsinglepropertyowners in251beachandcostallocationsaroundNewZealand.Themultihomeownerfigureisanindicationofhowmanypropertiesineach locationareusedasholidayhomes.Themapshowsthe90locations wheretheshareofdwellingsownedbymulti-homeownerswasmore than50%.Thedarkertheshadingonthemaphigherthepercentage ofmulti-homeowners.
Thelocationswiththehighestshareofdwellingsownedbymultihomeownersare:TeAraroa,Gisborne(83%);Taharoa,inWaikato (82%);TokomaruBay,Gisborne(78%);OkuraBush,Auckland(74%); andTeKaha,BayofPlenty(73%).
TwelvelocationsscatteredaroundthefringesofAuckland’s urbancentreshavemorethan50%ofdwellingsownedbymultihomeowners,whichsuggestsAucklandersstillliketobewithin drivingdistanceoftheirbaches.
Theanalysisalsofound: ThemedianpurchasepriceofasecondhomeinQ1ofthisyear was$1mormorein79locations,and$2mormoreinnine.The locationswiththehighestmedianpurchasepriceinQ1were: Okura,Auckland($5,300,000);Omaha,Auckland ($4,395,000);TataBeach,Tasman($3,450,000); Sandspit,Auckland($3,388,000);andOneroa, WaihekeIsland($2,460,000).
Twentylocationshadamedianpurchase priceoflessthan$500,000forasecond homeinQ12022,withtheWestCoast accountingforthelion’sshare.The cheapest“second”purchaseswerein: Waipapakauri,Northland($130,000); Cobden,WestCoast($191,000); Patea,Taranaki($260,000); Blaketown,WestCoast ($275,000);andGladstone, WestCoast($295,000).
Theanalysisalsolooked athowmuchproperty valueshadchanged,
%OFTOTAL DWELLINGSOWNED BY MULTI HOMEOWNERS
Suburb %oftotal dwellings owned by multi-homeowners
Te Araroa Taharoa TokomaruBay OkuraBush Te Kaha WaihauBay Charleston LangsBeach Omaha OnahauBay Whangaruru Takamatua HicksBay Kaiteriteri Pauanui Wainui Whangapoua Matarangi Portage OpitoBay Whananaki Akaroa
bothindollarandpercentageterms,ineachofthe locationsinthetwoyearstotheendofSeptember togaugehowpopularanareawaswithbuyers.The timeframewaschosenbecauseitcoveredthepostCovidpropertyboomandtheclosureofinternational borders,anecdotallykeydrivingfactorsofthesecond homemarket.Ofthe251locationsanalysed,30enjoyed valuegrowthofmorethan50%inthetwo-yearperiod,and five,mostlyinfringecoastalspotsinDunedin,registered growthoflessthan20%.
In26locationstheaveragepropertyvaluejumped morethan$500,000inthetwo-yearperiodwhilein 12locationsgrowthwaslessthan$100,000.Thefive locationswiththebiggestpricejumpswere:Waiheke Island,Auckland(up$1,011,000to$3,622,000);Tawharanui Peninsula,Auckland(up$920,000to$2,659,000);Whitford, Auckland(up$893,000to$3,633,000);Omaha,Auckland (up$761,000to$2,724,000);andOneroa,WaihekeIsland (up$673,000to$2,349,000).
Overall,thosewhoboughtasecondhomeintheclosing monthsof2020gotthebestbachbargains.
TaupoBay RiversdaleBeach Hampden KaikouraFlat Haast Whiritoa Onemana Oakura Papatowai Orepuki TataBeach PatauaNorth CooksBeach Purakaunui Urenui Castlepoint KawauIsland Hahei Matapouri Maketu MoetapuBay Kawhia Te Rapaki oTeRakiwhakaputa WaikawaBeach Duvauchelle Moeraki Mataikona ManukauHeads Mahia Mokau Tangoio Port Underwood OkiwiBay ColacBay Kuaotunu West Tawharanui Peninsula Bowentown PalmBeach JacksonBay Whitford RakinoIsland Motunau Waimarama Te Mahia KaiumaBay Onetangi NgakutaBay WaihiBeach WaitarereBeach Porangahau Omapere MangawhaiHeads Waiotahe GreatBarrierIsland (Aotea) RobinsonsBay HalfmoonBay MahurangiEast WyunaBay Whangamata ParekuraBay Karikari Peninsula MahauSound Te Mata SouthBay CharterisBay Kakanui Mahurangi West Cape Palliser
83% 82% 78% 74% 73% 69% 68% 67% 66% 66% 65% 65% 65% 64% 64% 64% 63% 63% 63% 63% 62% 62% 61% 61% 61% 61% 61% 60% 60% 60% 60% 60% 59% 59% 59% 59% 59% 59% 58% 58% 58% 58% 58% 58% 58% 58% 57% 57% 57% 56% 56% 56% 56% 56% 56% 56% 56% 55% 55% 55% 55% 55% 55% 55% 55% 55% 55% 54% 54% 54% 54% 54% 54% 53% 53% 53% 53% 53% 53% 53% 52% 52% 52% 52% 52% 51% 51% 51% 51% 51%
Akaroa it’s got fantastic infrastructure, you can work from home easily enough and then commute into town a couple of days aweek -it’s all very doable now.”
But while Aucklanders love Akaroa’s vibe, they haven’t taken over,hesays. Mostly buyers are people who live an hour and 10 minutes’ drive away,including farmers from rural Canterbury Price-wisethe transition mightnotbe so easy either.Mangels says prices had been flat in Akaroa since the Global Financial Crisis but therewas a“pretty impressive increase” post-Covid.
Down Dunedin way,people usually head inland to Queenstown Lakes and Wanaka to buy their holiday homes, saysex-All Black Kees Meeuws, from Bayleys.
“That’s the big thing different to the rest of the country.Ifyou’refromOtago, Dunedin, Goreand everywherelike that, you head to the lakes, so you’rebuying in Wanaka. They all go skiing in the winter and in the summer they areall up thereonthe lakes so Dunedin is like adeserted town when it comes to Christmas.”
While Dunedin folk go inland, inlanders go to the coast. Rhys Vidgen, from OneAgency,lives in Karitane, asmall settlement on the east coast about 40 minutes north of Dunedin.
PeoplefromQueenstownandWanakabuytheirsecondhomesonthe coastbecausetheywanttobeabletoseethesea–andit’swarmer,hesays. ButevenallthewaydownontheeastcoastoftheSouthIsland,Covid
has had an impact. Vidgen says therehas been a“reasonable spike” of outoftownerslookingdowncountry.“Wehadalotofpeoplethatcame down from the North Island, from all over,not necessarily from places likeAuckland but from places like Whanganui and Tauranga.”
TheAucklandersespeciallyhad“Covidburnout”,hesays.“Theyjust went‘Idon’twanttolivelikethisanymore’;soalotofpeopledidgofor change of lifestyles.”
ThecoastmaybealongwayforanAucklandertorelocatebutVidgen says if they sell up “they get to stick $500,000 in their back pockets”.
PricesalongthecoastandtheOtagoPeninsuladependonthelocation and the (sometimesminimal) services but there’s not much under $300,000 anymore, and thereare also houses on the beach that might fetch $1.7m at Karitane.
But Covid also brought out alot of nostalgia for what Vidgen calls “old Zealand” with cribs (what South Islanders call baches) in places like Purakanui and Long Beach popular despite limited services.
“Thereare alot of properties and communities on the peninsula like that. People collect their waterfromthe roof, they have abig tank.”
Karitane itself, an old fishing village, is moredeveloped with mains water and sewerage, plus there’s ashop and anice café.
Dunedin buyers like the settlement because it’s only half an hour away,which is far enough to feel like they areout of town but close enough to dash back home if they need to.
The coastline is dotted with little townships and Vidgen says newcomers arewelcomed with open arms, even Aucklanders.“They hireold guys to mow their lawns and things like that. They bring revenue into these little towns and the shops love it.”
AKAROA HARBOUR, IN CANTERBURY. PHOTO /GETTY IMAGESHowthe superrich live on fantasyisland
Thereare baches that ordinary Kiwisaspire to and then thereare the baches that only a Lottowinwouldsecure.
Waiheke Island has someofthe most luxurious, although not everyone gets acoveted sea vieweveniftheydopartwithseveralmilliondollars
Andanyway,that panoramic view is not always as important as being close to aboat ramp for easy access for the Sealegs, an amphibious boat, says MatthewSmith,ownerofWaihekeRealEstate.
At the time of interview,Smith had just listed a high-endproperty on Kennedy Point Road.The vendors had just completeda two-year $3 million renovation of thehome, which sits on a3700sqm estate,ashortwalkfromthenewcarferry
“Hardly everdoesanything like this cometothe marketonWaiheke,”Smithsays
“We’renot saying aprice, but smart people can dothemath,”Smithsays,addingthattheproperty’s $7.6m CV doesn’t even get closetothe likely price buyerswillpay(thevendorsthemselvespaidnearly $4mfortheun-renovatedproperty14yearsago).
Smith says thatthe four-bedroom house, designed by notedarchitect Simon Carnachan, has aspectacular 300-degree ocean view almost to the Coromandel and includes aluxurious new kitchen andbathrooms, Europeanoakflooring,new double glazing, and gib boardthroughout and, on the outside, new cedar siding reclad with acavity systemandnewroofing.
Earlier this year,Smith’s agency solda section for $3.1m.Thenewownersplantobuildabachrightby the boat ramp.Another buyer went on to pay$3.2m for an old housethat sits behinditeven though the view will now be blocked out.“Thebuyer is going to bowlthe old housethat’s on thereand build a new house that will have no view of thewater and obviouslybythetimehebuildsahousehe’sgoingto beover$5m.”
What’s importanttothese buyers is the location, Smith says, becausethey canput the Sealegs in the water nearly straight across the road.Not only that, thebuyersoftheoldhouseliveinthecityandwillbe able to motor across and drive straight to their bach intheirboat.
On Palm Beach, Wall Real Estatehas justlisted a five-bedroomhome on amassive1700sqmdouble sectiononthe beachfront at 43 Palm Road. It has a CVof$9.3m,butisexpectedtofetchmorethan$10m
The 17-year-old architect-designed house also featuresone of the vintage train carriages rescued from Parnell’sWhiteHeron hotel beforeitwas torn down,nowrepurposedasasleepout.
“Weexpect it to sell for over $10m. In 2018 the neighbouring property sold for $7.5m, and that has less than half the land size,” says Ollie Wall, who is marketingthepropertywithGrahamWall.
“Palm Beach is one of the only places on Waiheke whereyoucanhaveatrulybeachfronthomewithout aroad between you and the beautiful white sand.” Headdsthatthecompanyissettingupabaseonthe islandastheyexpecttodomuchmorebusinessthere inthecomingyears.
And on one of Waiheke’s highest points, Omiha, Bayleys agent Mana Tahapehi is marketing afivebedroomestateon3.9haat1O’BrienRoad.Tahapehi, who is showing the house to buyers with budgets of over$8m,saysheisseeingmoreinternationalbuyers, mainlyexpatKiwis,helpedbytheweakKiwidollar
“Itmakesthingsalotmoreattractive,that’sUS$1m lessthanlastyear.Forthatyouhavetotalprivacy,but you’reonly minutes from Onetangi,” he says. The 463sqm accommodation is split between the main houseandtwoself-containedguestunits.
As well as the swimming pool and spa pool, the property includes asauna/steam room and cabana with an open-air fireplace, set in native bush and a
NZ'S MOSTEXPENSIVE BEACHHOMES
SALEPRICE SALE DATE ADDRESS
$10.25m November2021
$10.25m June 2021
Ocean View Road, Oneroa, WaihekeIsland
Alan Murray Lane, Oneroa, WaihekeIsland
$9.1m March 2022 Kutai Lane, Omaha, Auckland
$9m April 2022 Newton Rd, Oneroa, WaihekeIsland
$8.45m March 2022
Sea View Road, Ostend, WaihekeIsland
$8.32m October 2021 Inanga Lane, Omaha, Auckland
$8.225m October 2021
productivefruitandvegetablegarden.
Earlier this year Tahapehiclosed the deal for a Church Bay Road homefor $9.2m, which is now undergoinganextensiverenovation
The islandis bursting with award-winning architecture.
Ray White agents Keith Dowdle and Mike Simpsonare marketingastriking timber home on 28 CoromandelRoad,Waiheke, that won architects StevensLawson aNew Zealand Institute of Architects awardin2019.The three-bedroom home on 1047sqm,which has atender closing November 2, is billed as aSealegs drive from the water edge at SandyBay
Buyersare also coming to the island from other rich-listerholidaytowns
Smith recently sold asection at exclusive Wawata Estate on the island to an oral surgeon who has sold his bach at Omaha and who is also building another housein Queenstown. In anothersale, acouplefrom QueenstownboughtahouseinOneroafor$6.5mand areplanninga$3mrenovation.
“TheyliveinQueenstownandthisistheirWaiheke bach.”
Smith says for buyers of baches costing around $5m or $6m the locality is moreimportant than the view, but forholidayhomes worth $10m or more, thenbothareimportant:“Theywantthelocationand theview.”
Wealthy people come to him with alist of requirements but often havetocompromise because of limited stock: “Wedon’toften haveadecent handfulofreallygoodqualityhigh-endhomesatall, let alone closetothe beach or closetothe ferry with bigviews.”
Among the requirements is privacyand often people want to be able to come and go by helicopter, which is not often available. People also wanta principal suiteaway from the rest of the houseso when guests stay they maintain their privacy, and theyliketohavemultiplelivingspaces.
Like othercoastal spots, Smith has noticed new trendsonWaiheke,saying peopleare not only living in their bachmorenights aweek but many people haveupgradedtheproperty
Sea View Road, Ostend, WaihekeIsland
$7.75m August 2021 Inanga Lane, Omaha, Auckland
$7.625m October 2021 Rita Way, Omaha, Auckland
$7.41m June 2021 Seaview Road, Whangamata, Coromandel
“People want more quality now.Theywant everything to offer muchgreater lifestyle so the bach might have just been asimple bachbut they’ve put innew kitchens, newbathrooms,they’veputthe spa poolin,they’veputfireplacesin.
“Everyone’s kindofpimpeduptheir baches to be alot moreluxurious so they’reokay to spendmore timethere.”
TheOneRoof guideto buyinga bach
❷Getting nance
Buying abachorcribforthefamilytoenjoy overdecadesisstilltheultimateKiwi dream.It’s alot moredifficultnowthanthe dayswhenfamilieswouldbuildtheirown Fibrolite(asbestoscement)shackonsite,orbuyland, add atoiletandelectricity,andcamp.
These days,seven-figuremortgages,complicated taxbills,anddesignerdecoraremorelikelytocomeup inconversationthanthepriceofFibrolite.Butfamilies stillfindwaystobuytheirownsliceofparadise.
Bachescome inallshapesandsizes.InWaihi Beach,forexample,pricesrangefromjustunder $400,000tojustover$4m.LJHookerprincipalGary Alwayssayssimplebachesare stillinhotdemand, butnotallwillsurvivethewreckingball,however. “Old-schoolbachesareunfortunatelybecominga thingofthepast.Peoplewantholidayhomesthat aremoreuptodate.”
ChrisFarhi,headofinsightsatBayleys,says Kiwiattitudestobacheshavealsochanged,with many recentbuyerstreatingbeachhousesastheir permanenthome.“We’reseeingincreasingnumbers ofbuyerswhoareplanningtopermanentlylocate intoholidayhomelocations,”hesays.
“Remoteworkingmeanssome professionals areinfrequentlyintheoffice,sothey’retakingthe opportunitytopermanently resideintheplacethat theylove.Thishas thepotentialtoimpactmarket pricingdynamicsbecausesomebuyerswillbeable topricepropertiesastheirmainhome,ratherthanas asecondhome.”
❶
What youcan expect to pay
Luxuryholiday homescansellformore than $10m,butthoselookingforsomethingmoreaffordable, it’sworthhuntingoutsidethemostdesirablebeach towns.
PalmerstonNorthCentury21principal Tim KearinsthoughtjustthataftervisitingKawhia,on Waikato’swestcoast,anhour’sdrivesouthofRaglan. Thecoastalspot’saveragepropertyvalueis$620,000 –halfoftheaveragepropertyvalueinRaglan.
“Thereare somelovely Waikato beachesthat Auckland[buyers]maynotbeawareof.Kawhiais oldNewZealand,likeWhitianga,intheCoromandel, was30yearsago,”Kearinssays.
Furthersouth,inMangakino,on theedges of LakeMaraetai,in Taupo,thepriceof renovated bachesstartinthe mid-$400,000s, while buyers who arewillingtotakeon arenovationprojectcanbuy somethingforless.
SouthIslanderscanpickupsectionsonthe West Coastforaslittleas$50,000,withhomesonthecoast someofthecheapestinNewZealand.
Gettingfinancetobuyabachisoftenthehardest step,butthegoodnewsisthatholidayhomescanbe boughtwith a20%deposit, evenifthebuyersplanto letthemoutfor asmallnumber ofdaysayear.“It’sa littlequirk[oftheLVRrules]whereyoucanborrowup to80%,”mortgagebrokerRupertGoughsays. “The consistentwordingacross all[bank]policiesseemsto bethatabach‘mustreceiveminimalrentalincome’.”
Buyerswhowanttoletthepropertyshortorlongtermfallunderthe LVRrules for rentalsandneed a40%depositunlessbuying abrand-newproperty whenonly20%isneeded.Andiftheywantto turntheirbachinto ashort-term rental,theycan’t countthepotentialincomeagainsttheirmortgage repaymentsandwillhavetoprove to alenderthat theycanaffordtopaytheentiremortgage,overand abovetheir existingcommitments.
That’sbecauseshort-termrentalincomeisviewed bythebanksinthesamewayas self-employed incomeandneedstwoyearsofaccountstoprove, whichbuyers don’thavewhenpurchasing.“You can’treallyprove thataheadoftimeunlessthere was along-termtenantthere,”Goughsays.
Heurgesbuyerstobeupfrontwiththeirlender. Buyerssign declarationswhenbuyinganyhome,so pretendingapurchasewon’tbelettopayingtenants orfalselypromisingthatitwillbelettolong-term tenants canendintrouble.
Havingsaidthat,turningalong-termrentalproperty into ashort-termoneafterareasonableperiodoftime won’tbe aproblem formostbanks,says Gough.“It’s thesameaschangingjobsintwoyears’timeandtaking apaycut.Youdon’tneedtotellthebank.”
Findinglong-termtenantsisn’tdifficult.Farhi pointsoutthatinmostholidaylocationslong-term rentalshaveverylowvacancies.“Thisislargely duetopropertiesbeingpulledintoshort-stay servicessuchasAirbnbratherthanbeingoffered aspermanent rentals.Forexample,Whitianga currentlyhashalf adozen rentallistings,butthere areacouple ofhundredAirbnboptions.”
❸Maximisingincome
It’seasytoletbacheson theshort-term rental marketoverChristmas/New Yearand on long weekends.Butfor adecent returnownersneedto dosomeseriousmarketingtokeeptheplacefulland maximiseincome.
Goneare thedaysofhavingone rentalforthe winterandshort-termtenantsinthesummer.The Residential TenanciesAct(1986)makesitdifficultto getwintertenantstoleaveforthesummerholiday period,unless theownersaremovingbackinas their mainhome.
Thenextproblem isthatletting through thelikes ofAirbnborBachcare,isn’talways straightforward. Ownerscomplainthatwhen tenantsdodamageor holdpartiestheagenciesdon’thavetheirbacks.
❹Taxobligations
Incomefrombachlettingisfullytaxable.The rulesaren’tentirelysimpleanditcanbe agoodidea tousean accountant.
The mostcommontax rulethatappliestoa holidayhomeistheInlandRevenue Department’s mixed useassetrulewherethereisboth business andprivateuse.
Theruleallowsownerstodeductdirectcostssuch ascleaningafter apaidguest,butonlyapportion otherexpensessuchasratesandinsuranceaccording tothenumberof daysusedas abusiness.
Likeother rentalproperties,mortgageinterest deductibilityisbeingphasedout,althoughnewbuildsare exempt.Alsolikeother rentalproperties, “ringfencing”applies whether it’s anew-buildor not.Ringfencingmeansifapropertymakes alossit can’tbeclaimedagainsttheowner’sotherincome. Itcanonlybeoffsetagainstfuturerentalincome, whichneedsthepropertytomake aprofit.
Occasionally a“bach”orholidayhomeis registeredfor GST.Anyone purchasingsucha holidayhomeneedstoseekspecialisttaxadvice. Sotoo doesanyonewhoexpectstomakemorethan $60,000 ayearin rentontheproperty.
Yes,weknow thehouse.
We knowtheneighbourhoodinsideout -andquitepossibly everyhome.
Over the following pages OneRoof examines a turbulent year in real estate in whichasoaring housing market was brought backdown to earth by the twin pressures of rising interest rates and atighter lending environment.The Year in Reviewidentifies the market'swinners and losersand looksat factorsthatwillhavean impact on buyerand seller decisions in 2023.
$1,100,000
$1,075,000
$1,050,000
Whatgoesup…
$1,025,000
$1,000,000 $975,000 $950,000 $925,000 $900,000 $875,000 $850,000 $825,000 $800,000 $775,000 $750,000 $725,000 $700,000
The housing market wentfromFOMO (Fear of Missing Out)to FOOP(Fear of Overpaying), as the unexpected Covid-related boom times gave way to fallinghouse prices, tighter credit conditions and uncertainty about the year ahead.
Agents andexperts spoken to by OneRoof say the last12 monthsin real estatehave been amongthe strangest they have encountered, with one saying “existential” factors influenced the marketasNew Zealanders grappled with events outside their control.
Economist Brad Olsen says house priceshave fallen morethan anyone would have expected becausethey had wentway higher than expected during the post Covid boom, which hit its peakin the closing monthsof2021.
Therehas beenanelement of helplessnessback in New Zealand.“We can'tdoa lotabout some of theselarger global issues, we areatthe mercyofthe rest of the world. But we also have to take responsibility for whatwecan hereathome because the challenges coming through arequite significant hits to households and businesses.”
EMPTYAUCTION ROOMS
Barfoot &Thompson auctioneer Campbell Dunoon, who noticed auction rooms emptyout in late March, says people wererattled by worldevents.
“Therewereexistential factors affecting people'sdecision to buy aproperty -I don't think it was interest rates and Idon't think it wasthe local economy, because we'veall gotjobsand we've gota shortage of people forjobs.
“But what Idobelieve is therewerejust so many things happening outsideofNew Zealand thatcaused ourselves and our cousinsacross the ditch to stop for asecond and say‘OK,do we needtogointodebt right now, should we justhold off and see what happens?’.”
The absence of people at auction roomscontinued through the winterthen started to pick up,he says Bayleys national auction managerConnorPattonsays
“Partofitreally wasthatlow interest rate environment stuck aroundfor toolong, certainlyinhindsight,” says the principal economist and director at Infometrics
It’s beenchallenging, “to putitmildly”, to forecast the market since Covid arrived, he says.
“I think everyonewas abit reluctant to allofasuddencall a turnaround[earlier this year] given we’dall been burnt at the start of Covid,given things didn’t turn around.”
The country saw debate around whether highinflation would be transitory or persistent and outbreaks of theDeltaand Omicronstrains clouded thepicture
“You couldn’t geta full reading on how strong or not the economymight have been andsoI thinkthere wasjusta huge numberofballsupinthe airand none of us was quite sure which one was going to come down first.”
Inflation has turned out to be the highestfor 32 years in a strangeyear which saw war in Europe and the threat of nuclear weapons being used, Olsen says.
“I remember at the start of this year specificallybringingup the conversationabout Ukraine andthe geopolitical outlook.
“I wasn'tformallyforecasting war if you will but Iremember havingthat conversationand the risks that it posed.
“That wassomething we highlighted to our clients and those we spoke with earlier in the year andsoto see that then come out andthrough that firstand second quarter of theyear was very unsettling.”
The fact people weretalking openly about the possibility of atactical nuclear bomb explodinginthe battlefieldis“insane”, Olsen says
Auckland was the firstto noticethe slowdownin auction rooms butother parts of thecountry, such as Canterbury,Queenstown, Marlborough andBlenheim, werestill goingstrong into the middle of the year PattonthinksAuckland was faster to fallbecause the numbers arebigger: “If you buya $2.5m house inAuckland, which we sell every week,you might have amortgage of circa $2m,which in terms of interest rate rises and the effect of that is muchdifferent to Christchurch, whereyour average sales price is $800,000to$1m andyou've got amortgage of $600,000.”
By September,the market wasstarting to pick up inAuckland but the pacewas still slower than the boom times.
“Lastyear,Ican remember sceneswhere we literally had two different buyers on thephone andboth of them just had their arms up andwouldn't take them down -asquick as Icould count, thatwas howfast the bidding was going up.”
The frenzied pace slowed in conjunction with changes to the CCCFA,which affected people’sability to get finance:“It wasn't just the affordability of money butinhindsight the relativeease of it,”Patton says.
FASTER AND HIGHER
SanjeevJangra, aLoan Market mortgage adviserwho works
Rising interest rates, falling house prices and global turmoil -analysts and agents say the last12months have been some of the most turbulent and challenging for the housingmarket, writes CATHERINE MASTERS
“IINFOMETRICS ECONOMIST BRAD OLSEN
inAuckland’s south, saysinterest rate hikes took people by surprise, especially last year's borrowers who werenot expecting them togo so highsofast
Prices have come down but so has affordability meaning people who bought a$1m house last year with a10% deposit will have to find another $1500 to $2000 if their loan comes up for renewal this year
One of the big changes Jangra has noticed this year is a switch in his client base from 40 or 50% investors to around 80% first-home buyers.
Investors havehit problems, he says, because with property values down 15 or 20% they don’thave enough equity
“Generally,aninvestor will borrow almost 100% of an investment property but given the value of their ownproperty has dropped quite abit there's not enough equity and so they're just probably sitting on the sidelines.”
Jangra recalls panic buying in October and November last year ahead of the CCCFAchanges on December 1but says after that every thirdorfourth loan was declined by the banks.
He has still had abusy year,saying therehave been alot of first-home buyers around, including around 165,000 migrants getting residency.“Alot of them have been saving for deposits for their first home and they arepretty active.”
Steve Koerber,who works the wealthy Remuera market for Ray White, has seen ayear of little urgency from buyers.
He says somebuyers expected to see desperate sellers and werewaiting to swoop but very few people have appeared to be in financial trouble.
Prior to November last year the market was “frothy” with some big prices being paid as buyers threw caution to the wind.
In hindsight, people werepaying too much: “Itwas a bit reckless really,and that allcame to an end pretty much around last November.”
Koerber also says higher interest rates and the CCCFAchanges slowed the market with the market hereslowing much faster than across the Tasman: “Our lending rules changed and Australia’s didn't.”
He also says fear in the market stopped people from listing their properties.
“Fear that they won't get what
they would have got, that they arenot as wealthy (on paper) as they were. They know the house is not worth as much as it was last year and it does make them procrastinate.”
Koerber says the year has been a good learning experience. “In the past when it was ahot market and people were climbing all over eachother,weneeded to focus on the top two or three people. Now, we have to dig deeper and go to the top 20 because the top 19 might drop off.”
‘IT WILLGET BETTER’
In Wellington, Nicki Cruickshank, the principal of Tommy’s, says“turbulent”isthe best descriptorfortheyear.
She, too, says prices went higher than expected lastyear so the drop this year was to be expected -but she had not expected the turnaround to be so sudden.
“But in the big picturemost people own houses for10yearsplus so overall they've still done well.”
Her high point has been seeing morefirst-home buyers returning to the market after apretty direstart to the year, saying they dropped out for various reasons but especially because of the CCCFAchanges.
By September,she was seeinga lot morepeople looking who werenolonger waiting for the bottom of the market.
Cruickshank says her low point was trying to keep nervous sellers positive when thereweresofew buyers.
“Probably the hardest part of these sorts of market is trying to keep owners’spirits up, telling them it will get better.”
She says the year has been the most unusual she can remember in nearly 20 years of being in real estate, aside from the GFC.
“Just to watch it go up so quickly, unbelievably quickly,people paying what seemed like ridiculous money for properties, to it going down equally quickly and the impactthat's had.”
Nine rate risesthat turned NZ on itshead
Interest rates and inflation arethe biggest influencing factors in the housingmarketright now KELVIN DAVIDSON charts therapid rise of the Official Cash Rate
It’s now been overayear sincethe Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) first started to increase theofficial cash rate (OCR), with amovefrom0.25%to0.5%onOctober 6last year.The direct aim of these OCR increases has been to quell inflationary pressuresinthe economy, but also as theysimultaneously try to stick to the high employment part of their mandate too. Butthe housing marketclearly hasn’t been immune to this monetary policy tighteningphase either,and so we take alook here at key developments over the past year or so
October 6, 2021
•OCRrisesfrom0.25%to0.5%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:2.9%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:5.2%
•SalesvolumesversusOctobernorm:-3.3%
InAugust’sMonetaryPolicyStatementlastyear, theRBNZhaddecidedtokeeptheOCRat0.25%, notingthat“recentincreasesininflationarelargely temporary”.However,mortgageratesstartedto increasemoreappreciablyfromearlySeptember,and then–onlytwomonthsafternotingthepotentialfor short-lastedinflation–theRBNZactuallydelivered thefirstOCRrise.Forcontext,theSeptemberquarter inflationdata(publishedalittlelateronOctober18) showedafigureof4.9%,wellabovetheaverageof around1.5%overthepreviousfiveyears.
Inthepropertymarket,saleshadalreadybegunto weaken,andforthemonthofOctoberwerearound 3%belowthenormforthatmonthoftheyear(going back20years).Butpropertyvalueswerestillrising.
November24, 2021
•OCRrisesfrom0.5%to0.75%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:3.3%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:5.4% •SalesvolumesversusNovembernorm:-2.6%
At this stage, economic matters wereprobably best summed up as “steady as she goes”, with inflation stillakey talkingpoint, butthe RBNZ feeling comfortable withonly a0.25 percentage point increase in theOCR at November’s meeting.
The property marketwasn’tnecessarily doing anythingdramatic either, although of coursemore new borrowerswerebeing curtailed by afurther rise in mortgage rates, andsome existing borrowers wouldhave been facing up to higherrepayments as their current loan term ended. Indeed,asat November 2021, the one-year fixed rate had risen by aboutone percentage point over 12 months. However,the bigger factor in the property market was the tighteningofthe loan to value ratiorules for owner-occupiers on November 1, from 20% of loans being allowedatless thana 20% deposit, to only 10% of loans at lowdeposit. Moreover,the CCCFA rules wereabouttobetightened too…
February23, 2022
•OCRrisesto1%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:3.6%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:4.9%
•SalesvolumesversusFebruarynorm:-28.7%
By now,someofthe key variableshad begun to change noticeably.CPI inflation hadrisen to 5.9%inthe December 2021 quarter,and inflation expectationsremainedelevated too, with businesses fearingthe outlook forinputcost pressures, and consumers facing up to cost of living strains (which the Governmentlater attempted to mitigate with the cuts in fueltax andthe $350CostofLiving Payment). That said,the RBNZ stillstucktothe conventional0.25%OCR rise,taking it to 1%
The property market was also shifting. With the CCCFArulechanges having been enacted (from December 1, 2021) and the tighter LVRs also biting, the market sharefor first-home buyers was declining, hitting 23% in February.Itwasn’t much easier for mortgaged investors either,as they continued to grapple with low rental yields, higher mortgage rates, 40% deposits (unless buying newbuilds), and the interest deductibility adjustments
April13, 2022
•OCRrisesto1.5%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:4.1%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:0.7%
•SalesvolumesversusAprilnorm:-32.2%
April saw thefirst of theso-called “double shot” hikes in the OCR, taking it from 1% to1.5%,as inflationwas confirmedat6.9% (annual rate) in the first quarterof2022(albeitthe CPI data wasn’t released untilApril 21, after the OCR decision).
The effects of tighter monetary policy were showing through very clearly in the housing market, with atypical one-year fixed mortgage rate climbing above 4%, with the change since borrowers originally fixed one year prior standing at about 2% –i.e. adoubling of mortgage rates in the space of a year.Property sales volumes remained at very low levels and property values had stalled as well.
May25, 2022
•OCRrisesto2%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:4.4%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:-0.9%
•SalesvolumesversusMaynorm:-28.9%
The process of monetary policy tightening was certainly in full stride by the timeMay rolled around, and the OCR reached 2% on the25th, with a typical one-yearfixed mortgage rate sitting at close to 4.5%. We didn’t have the Q2 CPI data at that stage, of course, but we now know thatinflation over the second quarter climbedto 7.3%. The net result is intense pressureonhousehold finances, both from the cost of living itself, but also higher mortgage repayments (albeitabenefit for savers).
Inthepropertymarket,salesremainedsluggish,and valuescontinuedtodrop.Theeffectsofpastchanges totheLVRsandCCCFAruleswereclearlyimpacting firsthomebuyers,whosawtheirmarketsharedipto just22%,lessthanmortgagedinvestorsat23%
July 13, 2022
•OCRrisesto2.5%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:5.2%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:-2.5%
•SalesversusJulynorm:-33.6%
July saw another 0.5 percentagepoint OCR increase, taking it to 2.5%, asthe inflationfightremained front and centrefor the RBNZ –not just actual inflation, but also expectations ofwhereitmight go next
The periodfromMay toJulyhad also seen mortgage rates rise even moresharply,and anybody repricing aloan that had been securedone year earlierwould have been looking at arate rise of at least 2.5%,probably closer to 3%.
Themarketsharesforvariousbuyergroupswere alsostagnant,butatleastfromtheperspectiveoffirst homebuyers,theCCCFAruleshadbeenloosened fromJuly7–meaninglessscrutinyofexpenses,and aslightlylooserborrowingenvironment
August17, 2022
•OCRrisesto3%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgage:4.9%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:-3.5%
•SalesvolumesversusAugustnorm:-31.2%
August brought the fourth consecutive 0.5 percentage point rise in the OCR,taking it to 3%.
However,competition amongst the banksfora shrinking pool ofnew mortgage lending, combined with some fallsin offshorewholesale interest rates, saw domestic NZ mortgage rates dip abit, back down below the 5% mark.Alongside the effects of looser CCCFAregulations– and perhaps also a change in mood amongst would-be buyers –a hiatus for mortgage rateincreases helped bring back some first-home buyers, who saw their market sharerise to 24% inAugust.
October 5, 2022
•OCRrisesto3.5%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:5.2%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:-4.1%
•SalesversusSeptembernorm-33.3%
The foot was still flattothe floor,withanother 0.5%
OCR increase in October,taking thelevel to 3.5%.
MORTGAGEHOLDERS ARE FEELING THE SQUEEZE. PHOTO /GETTY IMAGESWe alsonowknowthatCPIinflationinQ3barely changed,only slowingslightlyto7.2% –hardly reassuring,and“lockingin”furtherOCRincreases inNovember thisyear, andinto2023aswell. Ultimately, apeakofatleast4.5% nowlookslikely, potentiallyashighas 5%ormore.Atypicalone-year fixed“special”mortgagerate couldeasilytop7%.
Inthepropertymarket,salesvolumes remain ultra-low,andpropertyvaluescontinuetofall. Moreencouragingly,atleastfirst-homebuyersare showingsignsoflife,atleastintermsof %market share(evenifthenumberofdealsis stilllow).
However,August’sfallsinmortgagerateshavenow been reversed,andthepeakisnotyetonthecards.
November 23,2022
•OCRrisesto4.25%
•Typicalone-yearfixedmortgagerate:6%
•Three-monthchangeinaverageproperty values:-4.5%
•SalesvolumesversusOctobernorm:-38.6%
ThelatestOCRincreaseisthebiggestonrecord,and theReserveBankhasalsosignalledplentymore tocome(apossiblepeakof5.5%),withinflation potentiallynotundersomekindofcontroluntil laternextyear,arecessioneminentlypossible,and unemploymentedginghigher.Housepricesare anticipatedbytheRBNZtoultimatelydropby20%, sointermsofthepropertymarket,atypicaloneyearfixedrate(highequity)couldeasilytop7% overthecomingmonths.Thiswillputpressureon newborrowers,butalsothoserollingoffpreviously lowerfixedratesandontoamuchhigherrepayment schedule.
Conclusion
Clearly,the pastyearhasbeenatoughonefor the propertymarket,whichhasbeencollateraldamage intheRBNZ’sdeterminedpathtoknobbleinflation. But theworkisn’tdoneyet,andboththeOCRand mortgagerateshavefurther torise.
Thismeansthatinalllikelihoodpropertysales volumeswill remainlacklustrefor awhileyetand thatvalueshavefurthertofall.However,it’sstill conceivablethatiftheeconomyticksover(and unemploymentstayslow), wagescontinuetorise, netmigrationturnsaroundtosomedegree,and mortgageratesfindsomekindofpeak,wemightsee propertysalesactivitystarttoriseagainin 2023and thefallsinpricescouldcometo anend.
Inthatenvironment,itwouldn’tbeasurpriseto seeadecentpresenceforfirsthomebuyers,butthe outlookremainstrickyfornewinvestorslookingto makeapurchaseorforexistinglandlordswantingto addtotheirportfolios.Otherhomeowners/borrowers willalsocontinuetofacepressuresastheyreprice theirloansoffolder,lowerfixedratesandontocurrent levels.
Finally,thereare twootherimportantpoints toputacrossallofthistoo.First,the regulatory environmentissettoloosenagainin Marchnext year,withfurtherchangestotheCCCFArules.And second,theRBNZ’sconsultation on formalcapsfor debttoincomeratiosstilllingersinthebackground–anychangeshereearlyin2024couldpotentiallyalso beaccompaniedby relaxationofthe LVRrulesatthe sametime.
•KelvinDavidsonischiefeconomistatproperty
Whatthehousingmarket can expectin 2023
JAMESWILSON looksat thefactorsthathaveanimpactonbuyersand sellersinthenext12months.
❶Reducedsalesactivity
There’snothingthatpointsto abiguptickinsalesvolumesnextyear.We're seeingmorepropertiescometo marketoff thebackofspringandweexpectthatto continueintosummerbutwe'renotnecessarilyseeingthem flyingoff theshelf,they’re still aweebitsubduedinterms of gettinginkonpaper. Theremightbe abitmoreactivityintermsofpeopleoutlookingbutit remainstobe seenwhetherthattranslatesintosales.
❷
Volatilityinthenumbers
If thereare lotsofsalesonemonthand hardlyanysalesthenextmonth,the numberscouldreally starttojumparound.Theperformanceofvarioussubmarketswill bekeyto understanding what’sgoingon.Forexample,performingquitestronglyright inAucklandarenew-buildtownhousesinthesub-$1.5m pricebracket –yourtypical firsthomebuyer-typeterritory.Butif youlookat the$3m-pluslarger townhouse marketinAuckland,there’snot thesamelevelofdemand.
❸
Whowillbuyand sell?
Firsthomebuyerswillbeonthehuntforopportunitiesnextyear.Lesscompetition frominvestorsmeanstheywill beabletostaymore activeinthemarket,andkeeptheir share high,evenif theactualnumberofdealsfalls away.Investorsareverysensitive tointerestrateincreases,andwhilewecouldn’tsaywithconfidencetheirshare ofthe marketwilldecline significantlyfromcurrentlevels,theywillbeunderpressure.
❹
Theelection
Nodatehas beensetbutin thepast peoplehaveusuallyhit pause on anyhousing marketdecisionsinthelead uptoageneralelection. In ahotmarket,theFOMO(fearof missingout)effecttakesoverbut wedon'thavethatanymore sothepauseeffectcould begreaterthanthelast fewelections.
Achangeofgovernmentcouldbe aboosttotheinvestormarket,giventhatNational hassignalledthatitwantstoaddresssomeofthechangesbroughtinbyLabourto curbinvestoractivity.Watchthisspaceonwherepolicylands;thebrightline rule couldbe reducedandthelawsaroundtheringfencingoflosses couldberolledback.
❺
OCR/Interestrates
Interestraterisesare likelytokeeprising,withtheReserveBankclearlysignalling initslaststatementof the yearthatfurtherincreasesintheOfficial CashRateareon thecardsinabid tobringdowninflation.Whiletheriseof75basispointslastmonthis thebiggestcashrateriseintheBank’shistory, the referencestoa recessionand rising unemploymentthatcouldhavea much biggerimpact,scaringwould-be buyersand sellersintohittingpause.
❻In ation
Inflationisthe elephantinthe roomandwon’tdisappearovernight.But whilecost oflivingpressuresarereachingacrossnearlyallpartsofourdailylives,we'reactually notseeing asignificantdropinspendingandthat's probablybecause alotofpeoplestill haven'thadtofixtheirmortgageatahigherrate. Whenthathappensandthosemortgageratesbeginto reallybite,thenspendingis likelytodryup.
Obviously,thathasbiggereconomicimpactsbut thekeyquestionis:willinflationbetamedby traditionalpolicyorwillahard,economic landingdothejob?Atthispoint,alotofsigns pointtoaharderlandingthanwouldbeideal.
❼Property values
Propertyvalues havesoftenedand that trendislikely to continue intonext yearbut at aslowerrate.
Expectprobablymoreofa flatmarketasa ruleasopposedtoacontinuallydeclining market,but Iwouldn'tbesurprisedif thatcouldtake acoupleofquarters to really revealitself.
JamesWilsonisdirectorof valuationatValocity
2022 wasthe year of mortgagepain–will next year
Ithas,withoutquestion,beenahardyearformost homeownerswithamortgage. Thecostofliving ismorethandoubletheacceptablerateofinflation, mortgageinterestratesaredoublewhattheywere ayearago,andmostKiwihomeownerswillhavefeltthe additionalcostofhighermortgageratesatsomepointthis yearastheirfixedratesmatured
But what about those who arelooking to buyin 2023? This year,borrowers weremet withthe strictest borrowing policiessince 2008, making it extremely difficult to get on the property ladder. Will 2023 be any better? To forecastwhatborrowingwill look like in the near future, we must first lookatwhat gotustothis position.
At therisk of minimising thepain causedbyinterest rateincreases, thebiggestbrake on the market this year wasthe sudden withdrawaloffinancedue to last year’s changes to theCredit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act(CCCFA). “Withdrawaloffinance”isn’t actually a fairterm as it insinuates that the banksvolunteered to make borrowingmoredifficult. Instead, the banks had to adheretothe new rules that made it almost impossible to lend to mostapplicants.
Thissuddeninability forall but thevery best applicants to getfinance hadtwo outcomes; it removed asignificant percentageofthe buyers from the market as their mortgage pre-approvalsweredeclined,and shook the enthusiasm for those who wereapproved by the bank. Add in the mixthe sharply increasing interest
rates boilin wass Fast it or hom have mor to meet servic wasa All buy will former listo around6%.
For anyone consideringbuying ahome in 2023,the firststepI would suggest istofind outhow much you canaffordunderthe current bank policies. There is almost no harminasking the bank or your brokerwhat your current mortgage affordabilityis. It’s unlikely thatbank lending policies will change muchinthe next 12 months; if anything, they may relax abit further, so findingout howmuchyou can borrow today will probably let you know whereyou stand forall of 2023.
If you can’t borrowenough to purchase thehouse you want, find outwhatisholding youback. It is usually your deposit or your income/expenses. Take the nextsix
urdle; deposit ry to es. orrow tant ider queues ould er cool you could for story
tells us that by the timewerealisehouseshavereached the bottomand startedtoincreaseinvalue again, the open homes havestarted to fill again and you’ve missed out on the buyer’s market.
In short,Iexpect 2023 to be theyear of thenew norm. Interest ratesshould remain fairly close to wherethey arenow and stay there, house pricesmay drop alittle furtherbut even out in the early partofthe year.Bank lending policies willremain alittlepainful butshouldn’t get significantly harsher. This presents the best buying opportunity for apre-approved buyer in years.
•RupertGoughworksforMortgageLabandisauthorof TheSuccessfulFirstHomeBuyer.
be anybetter?
Winnersand losers
Even in ayear beset by financeand sales challenges, thereweresome suburbs that managed to defymarket gravity and recordstrong valuegrowth. But the trend-line for much of the housing markethas beendownwards..
NEW ZEALAND
MOST EXPENSIVE:HIGHEST AVERAGEPROPERTYVALUES
#SuburbValue $
Herne Bay(Auckland)$3,816,000
Coatesville (Auckland)$3,752,000
Whitford (Auckland)$3,611,000
Waiheke Island (Auckland)$3,520,000
Saint Marys Bay(Auckland)$3,091,000
Remuera(Auckland)$2,949,000
OkuraBush (Auckland)$2,760,000
Westmere(Auckland)$2,699,000
Omaha (Auckland)$2,683,000
MARKETHEAT: BIGGEST 12 MONTH VALUECHANGE #Suburb% change ➊ Glenorchy(Queenstown-Lakes) 28.9%
Ohai (Southland)28.5%
Tuatapere(Southland)28.0%
Takapau (Central Hawke's Bay) 24.4%
Reefton(Buller) 24.3%
Lake Hayes(Queenstown-Lakes) 24.2%
Lake Hawea (Queenstown-Lakes) 23.7%
Karamea (Buller) 22.8%
Turua (Hauraki)22.5%
Patea(SouthTaranaki)21.9%
LONG TERM GROWTH: BIGGEST 5 YEAR VALUECHANGE #Suburb% change
Raetihi (Ruapehu) 212.3%
Patea(SouthTaranaki)175.6%
Mangakino (Taupo) 175.6%
Takapau (Central Hawke's Bay) 174.6%
Waverley(SouthTaranaki)167.3%
Eketahuna (Tararua) 166.9%
Castlecliff (Whanganui)162.3%
Elgin (Gisborne) 155.1%
Manaia (SouthTaranaki)152.9%
Hunterville (Rangitikei)152.8%
Paritai Drive,Orakei, Auckland May-22 $20,000,000
RemueraRoad, Remuera, Auckland May-22 $12,000,000
ArneyRoad, Remuera, Auckland Jul-22 $11,550,000
Ranui Road, Remuera, Auckland May-22 $11,400,000
Victoria Avenue, Remuera, Auckland Feb-22 $11,000,000
Oceanbeach Rd,Mount Maunganui, Tauranga May-22 $11,000,000
Wood Lane, Fendalton, Christchurch Mar-22 $11,000,000
Victoria Avenue, Remuera, Auckland Aug-22 $10,250,000
Marine Parade, Mount Maunganui, Tauranga Apr-22 $10,000,000
StateHighway2North,Bethlehem, Tauranga Jun-22 $10,000,000
CHEAPEST:LOWEST AVERAGEPROPERTYVALUES
Ohai (Southland)$158,000
Runanga (Grey) $247,000
Mataura(Gore)$254,000
Cobden (Grey) $262,000
Blaketown (Grey) $280,000
Ross (Westland)$298,000
Kaitangata (Clutha) $298,000
Tuatapere(Southland)$311,000
Appleby(Invercargill)$323,000
Bluff (Invercargill)$324,000
DANGER ZONE:LOWEST 12 MONTH VALUECHANGE
#Suburb% change
Waiwhetu (Lower Hutt)-19.7%
Maoribank (Upper Hutt)-19.5% ➌ Boulcott (Lower Hutt)-19.3%
Fairfield (Lower Hutt)-18.9%
Brown Owl (Upper Hutt)-18.9%
Clouston Park (Upper Hutt)-18.9%
Waterloo (Lower Hutt)-18.8%
Alicetown (Lower Hutt)-18.4%
Melrose (Wellington) -18.2%
Ebdentown (Upper Hutt)-18.0%
LONG TERM GROWTH: LOWEST 5 YEAR VALUECHANGE
Auckland Central (Auckland)0.3%
Grafton(Auckland)7.2%
Long Bay(Auckland)7.5%
Waiwera(Auckland)11.2%
Wainui (Auckland)12.4%
Waiake (Auckland)13.2%
Manukau (Auckland)13.6%
Castor Bay(Auckland)14.2%
Mairangi Bay(Auckland)14.5%
Mission Bay(Auckland)15.5%
BOTTOM SALES
Buller Apr-22 $45,000
Thedatacoversthe12monthstotheendofOctober2022andisderivedfromtheOneRoof-ValocityHouseValueIndex.Onlysuburbswith15ormoresettledsales inthe12-monthperiodtotheendofOctoberareincluded.Thetopsalestablesfeaturesettledsalesofpropertiesthatwerelistedontheopenmarketandsold privately.ThedatacoverstheyeartotheendofOctober2022.Streetaddressesaregivenbutforreasonsofprivacy,streetnumbersareomitted.
MAJOR METROS
MOSTEXPENSIVE AND CHEAPEST
AUCKLAND
SuburbValue $
Herne Bay$3,816,000
Coatesville $3,752,000
Whitford $3,611,000
Grafton$704,000
Manukau $662,000 Auckland Central $612,000
CHRISTCHURCH
SuburbValue $
Fendalton $1,679,000
Merivale $1,484,000
Richmond Hill $1,328,000
Linwood $485,000 Aranui $446,000 Phillipstown $439,000
12 MONTH VALUECHANGE TOPAND BOTTOM
AUCKLAND
Suburb% change
Coatesville 13.3% Pollok 12.3%
Te Arai 11.9% Wesley-12.8%
Manurewa East -15.0% Point England -15.5%
CHRISTCHURCH
Suburb% change
Burwood 11.9% Marshland 11.9% Westmorland 11.2% Redcliffs1.8% Merivale 0.7% Fendalton -2.6%
DUNEDIN
DUNEDIN
SuburbValue $
North Taieri $1,428,000
Maori Hill $1,073,000
East Taieri $1,039,000
Forbury$463,000
Caversham $461,000
SouthDunedin $412,000
HAMILTON
HAMILTON
Suburb% change
North Taieri 2.7% Outram 1.6% Karitane 1.3% Maryhill -11.0% Mornington -11.5% The Glen -11.9%
SuburbValue $
Flagstaff $1,192,000 Huntington $1,115,000 Rototuna North $1,077,000 Deanwell $661,000 Enderley$632,000 Bader $611,000
QUEENSTOWN
SuburbValue $
Kelvin Heights $2,556,000
Lake Hayes$2,424,000
Arrowtown $2,396,000
Luggate$1,126,000
Sunshine Bay$1,003,000
Kingston $802,000
TAURANGA
SuburbValue $
Mount Maunganui $1,538,000
Matua $1,256,000
Bethlehem $1,198,000
Poike $720,000
GatePa$697,000
Parkvale $692,000
WELLINGTON
SuburbValue $
Oriental Bay$2,310,000
Seatoun $1,848,000
Karaka Bays $1,664,000
Mount Cook $829,000
Te Aro$767,000
Wellington Central $576,000
Suburb% change
Queenwood 6.3% Whitiora4.3% Beerescourt2.9% Deanwell -4.3% Rototuna North -6.3% Hamilton Lake -7.5%
QUEENSTOWN
Suburb% change Glenorchy28.9% Lake Hayes24.2% Lake Hawea 23.7% Frankton4.2% Fernhill 2.8% Sunshine Bay-0.4%
TAURANGA
Suburb% change
Tauranga South2.6%
Welcome Bay2.0% Bethlehem 0.9% Maungatapu -4.1% Otumoetai -4.4% Judea -5.9%
WELLINGTON
Suburb% change Te Aro-7.6% Seatoun -8.0% Maupuia -8.3% Berhampore-17.6% Roseneath-17.7% Melrose -18.2%
PROPERTY VALUES UNDER PRESSURE
EWZEALAND’S average propertyvalue recorded its first annualdecline inmorethanadecade, figuresfromtheOneRoofValocityHouse Value Indexshow. Thenationwide averagepropertyvalue dropped2.7%($28,000) inthe 12 monthstothe endofOctoberto$1.009 million,amidfearsthat furtherinterestratehikesin responseto inflation could prolongthedeclinewellinto2023.
Thelasttimethe country'saveragepropertyvalue sufferedanannualdeclinewasin July2011,whenitfell 0.9%,butbackthenthehousingmarketwasonthe cusp of revivalfollowingtheGFC-inducedslump.
Six regions recordedannualdeclines,upfrom fivein theyeartotheendofSeptember, withhousepricesin GreaterWellingtontakingthe biggestknock
The region'saveragepropertyvalue dropped13.1% ($142,000)inthelast12monthsto$940,000 -andtherate ofdecline doesnotappeartobeslowing either.Inthe lastthreemonthsalone,propertyvaluesinthe region fell8.1%($83,000),andaredown17%sincepeakingin March.
Alsodownyear-on-yearareAuckland(-5.5%to $1.398m); Manawatu-Whanganui(-4.5%to$633,000); Hawke'sBay(-4%to $833,000);Nelson(-2.9%to $832,000);andBayof Plenty(-0.2%to$1.002m).
Quarterlydeclines wererecordedbyevery region bar WestCoast, where theaverageproperty valueclimbed2.7%($11,000)to $414,000.
Ofthe country’s72territoriallocal authorities,15sawvaluegrowthinthe threemonths totheendofOctober. Opotiki,intheBayofPlenty, enjoyedthe biggestgrowthspurt, withitsaveragepropertyvalue up9.7% to$666,000.Also recording relativelystrong growthwereHurunui, inCanterbury(+5.7%to $700,000); Westland,in West Coast(+3.9%to $458,000);andBuller, also WestCoast(+3.5%to $385,000).
Propertyvaluesin most TAswereupyearonyear, but marginsaregettingsmaller, withjust 14 TAsrecordingdouble-digitgrowth. Thebiggestyear-on-yeardropswere inGreater Wellington, butalso coming underpressureare Palmerston North (-8.4%),Napier(-8.2%)andDunedin(-6.1%).
Nationwidesalesvolumesfellfrom93,847inthe 12months totheend of Septemberto90,687inthe12 monthstotheendofOctober.Ofthe2265suburbs where therewassalesactivityin thelast12months,just905
Fallfrommarket peak: Whatthemaptells you
ThemapshowsforNZandeachregionthe changeinthe averagepropertyvaluesince marketpeak -whenvalueswere attheirhighest. Alsogivenisthechangesincepeakforeachof themajormetros.Thedateofmarketpeakforeach locationisdifferent. WestCoast'schangeismarked0% asitsaveragepropertyisstillgrowing,and hasnotyet reached peak.Thedataisderivedfromthe OneRoofValocityHouse ValueIndex,takenonOctober20,2022.
recorded20ormore settledsales, downfrom 914inthe12monthstothe endofSeptemberand down from1014inthe12monthsto theendof March. Ofthe905suburbswith 20ormoresettledsales inthelastyear,just88 recordedquarterlyvalue growth,while445saw year-on-yeardropsintheir averagepropertyvalue.
James Wilson,headofvaluations atOneRoof'sdatapartner,Valocity, said:"Propertypricescontinuedtheir downwardtrendinOctober,dropping by4.1%,or$43,000,sinceJuly,and8.6%, or $95,500,sincetheFebruarypeak.Therateofvalue declinehasalsoincreased,from-3.7%threemonths agoto-4.1%inOctober,withtheaveragepropertyvalue nowindangerofdroppingbelowthe$1mmark."
Wilsonadded:"Thearrivalofspringhasseenan increaseinnewlistings.However,inamarketthat alreadyhasanoversupplyofpropertiesavailablefor purchase,thisincreasehassimplyexacerbatedthe issue.Asinterestratesandthecostoflivingcontinue toriseandlendersapplyhighertestratesaspartofthe mortgageapplicationprocess,borrower’spurchasing
powercontinuesto reduce.Thenumberof daystosell also roseasthe resultofmoreoptionsforbuyersonthe marketanddisappearanceoftheFOMOeffect.
"Acrossthe regions,15of16hadvaluesdeclinefrom threemonthsago,and sixare nowbelowvaluesfrom Octoberlastyear.Wellington continuestoholditsspotas the regionwiththepoorestperforminghousingmarket, whilethebest-performinglocationscontinuetobethose atthelowerendofthepricescale."
Wilsonsaidthefactthatinflation remainedhigher thanthetargetedrangewaslikelytoleadtofurtherrises intheOfficialCashRate(OCR).
"Placingadditionalpressureonpropertyisuncertainty intheglobalinvestmentmarket.Thishashampered KiwiSaverperformanceandthereforereducestheamount availableforwithdrawalbyfirst-homebuyers,"hesaid.
"Whatthismeansisthatpropertyvalueswillcontinue todeclineinto2023.
WayneShum,headof researchat Valocity,said mortgage registrationsweredown12%onthe previousquarter.
"First-homebuyers’shareofregistrations rosefrom 38%to39.3%nationwide.Thiscouldbeduetothelower prices,whichmeanslowerdeposits –somethingthathas been asignificant roadblockinthepast.Thatsaid,the numberoffirst-homebuyer registrationsdroppedby 2437overthesameperiod,"Shum said.
"Investors’ share remainedsimilartotheprevious quarterat25.4%."
Aboutthetables
TheOneRoof-Valocity House ValueIndextracks theaveragevalueofNewZealand residentialandlifestylepropertiesata suburb, territorialauthority,regionaland nationwidelevel.Theindexisdesignedto beableto estimatedollarvalues,movements, andindexation.Theindexisdesignedtobeableto use arangeofsources of property andsalesdata,ensuringthatestimatesprovidedare abletotakeintoaccount themost recentinformation. The resultsarebasedonacompositeofstatisticalmodelsandare fullystratified.Thefiguresinthetable coverthe12-monthperiodendingonOctober 31,2022,withdatafromthe OneRoof-ValocityHouse Value Index takenonOctober20, 2022.Onlysuburbswith20-plussettledsalesduringthe 12-monthperiodareshown.
NORTHLAND
NORTHLAND
$874,000$900,000$826,000 2.9%5.8%3992
FARNORTH $792,000$799,000$714,000 0.9%10.9%1312
AHIPARA
CABLEBAY
$674,000$654,000$573,0003.1%17.6%31
$871,000$858,000$752,0001.5%15.8%50
COOPERSBEACH $906,000$907,000$783,000 0.1%15.7%30
HARURU
$881,000$867,000$777,0001.6%13.4%41
KAEO $823,000$844,000$706,000 2.5%16.6%38
KAIKOHE $388,000$389,000$346,000 0.3%12.1%60
KAITAIA $451,000$464,000$400,000 2.8%12.8%130
KARIKARIPENINSULA
KAWAKAWA
$787,000$810,000$669,000 2.8%17.6%77
$495,000$513,000$472,000 3.5%4.9%33
KERIKERI $1,140,000$1,140,000$1,032,0000.0%10.5%301
MANGONUI $839,000$826,000$714,0001.6%17.5%37
OKAIHAU $787,000$784,000$683,0000.4%15.2%23
$560,000$563,000$498,000 0.5%12.4%27
OPONONI
PAIHIA $837,000$820,000$725,0002.1%15.4%62
RUSSELL $1,455,000$1,537,000$1,355,000 5.3%7.4%41
TAIPA $774,000$765,000$660,0001.2%17.3%20
WAIPAPA
4.7% 5.5%27265
AUCKLANDCITY$1,583,000$1,658,000$1,693,000 4.5% 6.5%6966
AUCKLANDCENTRAL $612,000$618,000$665,000 1.0% 8.0%840
AVONDALE $1,069,000$1,111,000$1,193,000 3.8% 10.4%253
BLOCKHOUSEBAY $1,237,000$1,293,000$1,343,000 4.3% 7.9%183
EDENTERRACE $854,000$877,000$887,000 2.6% 3.7%102
ELLERSLIE
$1,354,000$1,428,000$1,464,000 5.2% 7.5%153
EPSOM $2,277,000$2,419,000$2,366,000 5.9% 3.8%217
FREEMANSBAY $1,798,000$1,859,000$1,816,000 3.3% 1.0%84
GLENINNES $1,233,000$1,315,000$1,400,000 6.2% 11.9%129
GLENDOWIE $2,438,000$2,568,000$2,546,000 5.1% 4.2%113
GRAFTON $704,000$723,000$778,000 2.6% 9.5%72
GREAT BARRIERISLAND (AOTEA) $835,000$836,000$754,000 0.1%10.7%51
GREENLANE $1,963,000$2,072,000$2,069,000 5.3% 5.1%75
GREYLYNN $1,937,000$2,048,000$2,028,000 5.4% 4.5%194
HERNEBAY $3,816,000$3,880,000$3,907,000 1.6% 2.3%64
HILLSBOROUGH $1,390,000$1,470,000$1,515,000 5.4% 8.3%81
KINGSLAND $1,507,000$1,545,000$1,608,000 2.5% 6.3%60
KOHIMARAMA $2,328,000$2,410,000$2,475,000 3.4% 5.9%75
LYNFIELD $1,414,000$1,502,000$1,505,000 5.9% 6.0%45
MEADOWBANK $1,798,000$1,840,000$1,937,000 2.3% 7.2%78
MISSIONBAY $2,346,000$2,448,000$2,430,000 4.2% 3.5%83
MORNINGSIDE $1,379,000$1,453,000$1,486,000 5.1% 7.2%67
MOUNTALBERT $1,470,000$1,534,000$1,574,000 4.2% 6.6%235
MOUNTEDEN $1,924,000$2,011,000$2,018,000 4.3% 4.7%307
MOUNT ROSKILL $1,229,000$1,310,000$1,318,000 6.2% 6.8%276
MOUNTWELLINGTON $1,060,000$1,130,000$1,087,000 6.2% 2.5%344
NEWWINDSOR $1,344,000$1,411,000$1,419,000 4.7% 5.3%52
NEWMARKET $963,000$998,000$1,031,000 3.5% 6.6%31
ONETREEHILL $1,439,000$1,523,000$1,546,000 5.5% 6.9%56
ONEHUNGA $1,220,000$1,277,000$1,330,000 4.5% 8.3%290
ORAKEI $2,526,000$2,642,000$2,612,000 4.4% 3.3%91
OTAHUHU $846,000$899,000$886,000 5.9% 4.5%175
PANMURE $1,102,000$1,163,000$1,206,000 5.2% 8.6%107
PARNELL $2,211,000$2,238,000$2,240,000 1.2% 1.3%155
POINTCHEVALIER $2,038,000$2,131,000$2,209,000 4.4% 7.7%140
POINTENGLAND $1,169,000$1,243,000$1,384,000 6.0% 15.5%42
PONSONBY $2,558,000$2,645,000$2,631,000 3.3% 2.8%87
REMUERA $2,949,000$3,047,000$2,995,000 3.2% 1.5%395
ROYALOAK $1,501,000$1,615,000$1,580,000 7.1% 5.0%60
SAINTJOHNS $1,579,000$1,705,000$1,710,000 7.4% 7.7%91
SAINTMARYSBAY $3,091,000$3,212,000$3,111,000 3.8% 0.6%32
SANDRINGHAM $1,530,000$1,583,000$1,583,000 3.3% 3.3%172
ST HELIERS $2,406,000$2,606,000$2,512,000 7.7% 4.2%222
STONEFIELDS $1,675,000$1,753,000$1,726,000 4.4% 3.0%74
THREEKINGS $1,246,000$1,303,000$1,326,000 4.4% 6.0%45
WAIOTAIKIBAY $1,629,000$1,701,000$1,804,000 4.2% 9.7%32
4.9% 9.1%40
WATERVIEW
5.1%0.2%40 MAUNU $1,060,000$1,119,000$1,044,000 5.3%1.5%78
MORNINGSIDE $608,000$643,000$609,000 5.4% 0.2%46
NGUNGURU $1,088,000$1,188,000$1,066,000 8.4%2.1%32
ONETREEPOINT $1,155,000$1,222,000$1,114,000 5.5%3.7%173
ONERAHI $686,000$715,000$690,000 4.1% 0.6%139
PARAHAKI $812,000$856,000$800,000 5.1%1.5%26
PARUABAY $1,177,000$1,257,000$1,146,000 6.4%2.7%39
RAUMANGA $540,000$577,000$537,000 6.4%0.6%61
REGENT $720,000$784,000$737,000 8.2% 2.3%33
RIVERSIDE $779,000$828,000$789,000 5.9% 1.3%20
RUAKAKA
$986,000$1,051,000$937,000 6.2%5.2%89
RUATANGATAWEST $1,079,000$1,144,000$1,031,000 5.7%4.7%22
TAMATERAU $1,158,000$1,279,000$1,182,000 9.5% 2.0%24
TIKIPUNGA $649,000$697,000$652,000 6.9% 0.5%189
TUTUKAKA $1,397,000$1,431,000$1,254,000 2.4%11.4%39
WAIPU $1,213,000$1,302,000$1,141,000 6.8%6.3%103
WAIHEKEISLAND $3,520,000$3,610,000$3,423,000 2.5%2.8%31
FRANKLIN
$1,174,000$1,226,000$1,119,000 4.2%4.9%1246
BOMBAY $1,778,000$1,862,000$1,681,000 4.5%5.8%22
CLARKSBEACH $1,279,000$1,358,000$1,255,000 5.8%1.9%52
GLENBROOK $1,251,000$1,367,000$1,261,000 8.5% 0.8%58
HUNUA
PAERATA
PATUMAHOE
PUKEKOHE
RAMARAMA
WAIUKU
$1,562,000$1,654,000$1,496,000 5.6%4.4%31
$1,419,000$1,509,000$1,399,000 6.0%1.4%38
$1,338,000$1,408,000$1,313,000 5.0%1.9%31
$989,000$1,044,000$995,000 5.3% 0.6%605
$1,764,000$1,871,000$1,744,000 5.7%1.1%42
$959,000$1,025,000$945,000 6.4%1.5%261
MANUREWA $893,000$923,000$945,000 3.3% 5.5%678
MANUREWAEAST $771,000$809,000$907,000 4.7% 15.0%94
MARAETAI $1,613,000$1,684,000$1,731,000 4.2% 6.8%37
MELLONSBAY $2,191,000$2,292,000$2,394,000 4.4% 8.5%47
NORTHPARK $1,472,000$1,563,000$1,631,000 5.8% 9.7%53
OTARA $832,000$892,000$860,000 6.7% 3.3%116
PAKURANGA $1,269,000$1,338,000$1,336,000 5.2% 5.0%137
PAKURANGAHEIGHTS $1,258,000$1,307,000$1,304,000 3.7% 3.5%127
PAPATOETOE $885,000$959,000$937,000 7.7% 5.5%755
RANDWICK PARK $816,000$855,000$893,000 4.6% 8.6%96
SHELLYPARK $1,628,000$1,729,000$1,784,000 5.8% 8.7%31
SOMERVILLE $1,550,000$1,657,000$1,730,000 6.5% 10.4%52
SUNNYHILLS $1,792,000$1,869,000$1,841,000 4.1% 2.7%53
THE GARDENS $1,357,000$1,443,000$1,421,000 6.0% 4.5%49
TOTARA HEIGHTS $1,084,000$1,147,000$1,165,000 5.5% 7.0%29
TOTARA PARK $2,262,000$2,446,000$2,332,000 7.5% 3.0%31
WATTLEDOWNS $1,107,000$1,189,000$1,146,000 6.9% 3.4%117
WEYMOUTH $860,000$901,000$897,000 4.6% 4.1%197
LOCATION
BAYVIEW
CURRENT
$1,047,000$1,130,000$1,164,000 7.3% 10.1%121
BEACHHAVEN $1,111,000$1,206,000$1,261,000 7.9% 11.9%218
BELMONT $1,667,000$1,725,000$1,720,000 3.4% 3.1%48
BIRKDALE $999,000$1,059,000$1,082,000 5.7% 7.7%175
BIRKENHEAD $1,401,000$1,462,000$1,430,000 4.2% 2.0%190
BROWNSBAY $1,291,000$1,377,000$1,370,000 6.2% 5.8%223
CAMPBELLSBAY $2,401,000$2,486,000$2,591,000 3.4% 7.3%44
CASTORBAY $1,999,000$2,075,000$2,179,000 3.7% 8.3%64
CHATSWOOD $1,561,000$1,630,000$1,733,000 4.2% 9.9%43
DEVONPORT $2,240,000$2,324,000$2,374,000 3.6% 5.6%103
FAIRVIEWHEIGHTS $1,650,000$1,732,000$1,771,000 4.7% 6.8%41
FORRESTHILL $1,461,000$1,522,000$1,605,000 4.0% 9.0%134
GLENFIELD $1,125,000$1,175,000$1,184,000 4.3% 5.0%275
GREENHITHE $1,810,000$1,913,000$1,881,000 5.4% 3.8%126
HAURAKI $2,111,000$2,229,000$2,165,000 5.3% 2.5%80
HILLCREST $1,302,000$1,381,000$1,405,000 5.7% 7.3%147
LONGBAY $1,731,000$1,801,000$1,815,000 3.9% 4.6%93
MAIRANGIBAY $1,827,000$1,904,000$2,012,000 4.0% 9.2%91
MILFORD $1,850,000$1,974,000$1,980,000 6.3% 6.6%148
MURRAYSBAY $1,827,000$1,889,000$1,991,000 3.3% 8.2%70
NARROW NECK $2,055,000$2,163,000$2,237,000 5.0% 8.1%31
NORTHCOTE $1,352,000$1,383,000$1,363,000 2.2% 0.8%130
NORTHCOTEPOINT $1,781,000$1,837,000$1,938,000 3.0% 8.1%46
NORTHCROSS $1,360,000$1,417,000$1,458,000 4.0% 6.7%48
OTEHA $1,196,000$1,234,000$1,267,000 3.1% 5.6%78
PAREMOREMO $1,939,000$2,066,000$2,057,000 6.1% 5.7%28
PINEHILL $1,724,000$1,814,000$1,842,000 5.0% 6.4%37
ROTHESAYBAY $1,647,000$1,716,000$1,876,000 4.0% 12.2%53
SCHNAPPER ROCK $1,662,000$1,749,000$1,796,000 5.0% 7.5%54
STANLEYPOINT
$2,530,000$2,665,000$2,788,000 5.1% 9.3%20
SUNNYNOOK $1,279,000$1,355,000$1,384,000 5.6% 7.6%64
TAKAPUNA $2,331,000$2,421,000$2,356,000 3.7% 1.1%157
TORBAY $1,322,000$1,370,000$1,398,000 3.5% 5.4%264
TOTARA VALE $1,086,000$1,148,000$1,164,000 5.4% 6.7%93
UNSWORTHHEIGHTS $1,210,000$1,280,000$1,316,000 5.5% 8.1%61
WAIAKE $1,659,000$1,710,000$1,809,000 3.0% 8.3%25
WINDSOR PARK $1,446,000$1,525,000$1,537,000 5.2% 5.9%25
PAPAKURA $1,118,000$1,161,000$1,092,000 3.7%2.4%1957
CONIFERGROVE $1,105,000$1,147,000$1,157,000 3.7% 4.5%86
DRURY $1,463,000$1,512,000$1,392,000 3.2%5.1%26
KARAKA $1,803,000$1,922,000$1,830,000 6.2% 1.5%238
OPAHEKE $1,161,000$1,206,000$1,170,000 3.7% 0.8%136
PAHUREHURE $1,069,000$1,129,000$1,130,000 5.3% 5.4%86
PAPAKURA $930,000$951,000$932,000 2.2% 0.2%831
REDHILL $890,000$940,000$877,000 5.3%1.5%64
ROSEHILL $988,000$1,032,000$976,000 4.3%1.2%90
TAKANINI $997,000$1,040,000$1,011,000 4.1% 1.4%390
RODNEY$1,497,000$1,559,000$1,470,000 4.0%1.8%2998
ALGIESBAY $1,426,000$1,496,000$1,501,000 4.7% 5.0%20
ARMYBAY $1,193,000$1,259,000$1,303,000 5.2% 8.4%28
COATESVILLE $3,752,000$3,737,000$3,311,0000.4%13.3%48
DAIRYFLAT $2,417,000$2,547,000$2,349,000 5.1%2.9%64
GULFHARBOUR $1,158,000$1,223,000$1,127,000 5.3%2.8%180
HATFIELDSBEACH $1,170,000$1,215,000$1,261,000 3.7% 7.2%25
HELENSVILLE $1,263,000$1,323,000$1,277,000 4.5% 1.1%119
HUAPAI $1,342,000$1,435,000$1,355,000 6.5% 1.0%62
KAUKAPAKAPA $1,488,000$1,554,000$1,486,000 4.2%0.1%50
KUMEU
$1,664,000$1,797,000$1,727,000 7.4% 3.6%169
LEIGH $1,547,000$1,635,000$1,478,000 5.4%4.7%23
MAKARAU $1,257,000$1,334,000$1,246,000 5.8%0.9%22
MANLY $1,308,000$1,388,000$1,366,000 5.8% 4.2%112
MATAKANA
$2,024,000$2,058,000$1,893,000 1.7%6.9%36
MURIWAI $1,520,000$1,597,000$1,652,000 4.8% 8.0%28
OMAHA $2,683,000$2,780,000$2,675,000 3.5%0.3%32
OREWA $1,321,000$1,386,000$1,302,000 4.7%1.5%361
POINTWELLS $2,299,000$2,358,000$2,160,000 2.5%6.4%27
REDBEACH $1,301,000$1,381,000$1,345,000 5.8% 3.3%122
RIVERHEAD $1,992,000$2,063,000$1,907,000 3.4%4.5%107
SILVERDALE $1,478,000$1,536,000$1,474,000 3.8%0.3%180
SNELLSBEACH $1,145,000$1,202,000$1,177,000 4.7% 2.7%88
STANMOREBAY
$1,139,000$1,252,000$1,159,000 9.0% 1.7%252
STILLWATER $1,681,000$1,739,000$1,670,000 3.3%0.7%26
WAIMAUKU $1,700,000$1,791,000$1,699,000 5.1%0.1%63
WAINUI $1,582,000$1,693,000$1,677,000 6.6% 5.7%167
WAITOKI $2,113,000$2,218,000$2,121,000 4.7% 0.4%21
WARKWORTH $1,267,000$1,314,000$1,238,000 3.6%2.3%192
WELLSFORD $859,000$921,000$878,000 6.7% 2.2%54
WAITAKERE
$1,140,000$1,192,000$1,164,000 4.4% 2.1%4255
GLENEDEN $952,000$1,021,000$1,023,000 6.8% 6.9%373
GLENDENE $1,024,000$1,104,000$1,085,000 7.2% 5.6%82
GREENBAY $1,273,000$1,370,000$1,378,000 7.1% 7.6%55
HENDERSON $1,072,000$1,111,000$1,094,000 3.5% 2.0%611
HENDERSON VALLEY $1,428,000$1,508,000$1,464,000 5.3% 2.5%46
HOBSONVILLE $1,240,000$1,270,000$1,228,000 2.4%1.0%511
KELSTON $988,000$1,038,000$1,055,000 4.8% 6.4%64
LAINGHOLM $1,099,000$1,173,000$1,175,000 6.3% 6.5%45
MASSEY $1,096,000$1,113,000$1,105,000 1.5% 0.8%498
NEW LYNN $940,000$976,000$1,023,000 3.7% 8.1%317
ORATIA $1,632,000$1,726,000$1,708,000 5.4% 4.4%21
RANUI $937,000$985,000$996,000 4.9% 5.9%202
SUNNYVALE $983,000$1,028,000$1,020,000 4.4% 3.6%94
SWANSON $1,262,000$1,324,000$1,249,000 4.7%1.0%109
TE ATATUPENINSULA $1,234,000$1,324,000$1,384,000 6.8% 10.8%264
TE ATATUSOUTH $1,050,000$1,108,000$1,098,000 5.2% 4.4%248
TITIRANGI $1,284,000$1,401,000$1,377,000 8.4% 6.8%237
WAITAKERE $1,563,000$1,642,000$1,512,000 4.8%3.4%32
WESTHARBOUR $1,366,000$1,476,000$1,436,000 7.5% 4.9%151
WESTGATE $1,022,000$1,092,000$1,121,000 6.4% 8.8%63
WHENUAPAI $1,359,000$1,432,000$1,451,000 5.1% 6.3%162
$744,000$775,000$758,000 4.0% 1.8%46
FITZROY $813,000$855,000$817,000 4.9% 0.5%39
FLAGSTAFF $1,192,000$1,221,000$1,209,000 2.4% 1.4%244
FORESTLAKE $773,000$800,000$764,000 3.4%1.2%55
FRANKTON $683,000$697,000$698,000 2.0% 2.1%157
GLENVIEW $793,000$815,000$810,000 2.7% 2.1%146
GRANDVIEWHEIGHTS $931,000$956,000$938,000 2.6% 0.7%25
HAMILTONCENTRAL $796,000$817,000$805,000 2.6% 1.1%52
HAMILTONEAST $750,000$766,000$779,000 2.1% 3.7%258
HAMILTONLAKE $934,000$977,000$1,010,000 4.4% 7.5%45
HILLCREST $819,000$833,000$840,000 1.7% 2.5%121
HUNTINGTON $1,115,000$1,150,000$1,128,000 3.0% 1.2%139
MAEROA $752,000$780,000$752,000 3.6%0.0%52
MELVILLE $677,000$700,000$690,000 3.3% 1.9%126
NAWTON $694,000$714,000$710,000 2.8% 2.3%200
PUKETE $852,000$885,000$875,000 3.7% 2.6%88
QUEENWOOD $1,071,000$1,104,000$1,008,000 3.0%6.3%63
RIVERLEA
$896,000$935,000$917,000 4.2% 2.3%23
ROTOTUNA $1,038,000$1,085,000$1,054,000 4.3% 1.5%66
ROTOTUNANORTH $1,077,000$1,119,000$1,150,000 3.8% 6.3%133
SAINTANDREWS $870,000$908,000$882,000 4.2% 1.4%133
SILVERDALE $761,000$791,000$777,000 3.8% 2.1%34
WHITIORA $696,000$712,000$667,000 2.2%4.3%39
HILLTOP $917,000$977,000$908,000 6.1%1.0%56
KINLOCH $1,384,000$1,413,000$1,260,000 2.1%9.8%77
MANGAKINO $496,000$541,000$474,000 8.3%4.6%39
MOTUOAPA $790,000$825,000$793,000 4.2% 0.4%33
NUKUHAU $894,000$951,000$886,000 6.0%0.9%103
OMORI $796,000$839,000$789,000 5.1%0.9%23
RANGATIRAPARK
RICHMONDHEIGHTS
TAUHARA
$1,064,000$1,079,000$994,000 1.4%7.0%42
$807,000$847,000$808,000 4.7% 0.1%59
$613,000$630,000$603,000 2.7%1.7%35
TAUPO $765,000$800,000$746,000 4.4%2.5%203
TURANGI $492,000$514,000$481,000 4.3%2.3%93
TWOMILEBAY
$961,000$977,000$947,000 1.6%1.5%29
WAIPAHIHI $1,115,000$1,132,000$1,079,000 1.5%3.3%38
WAIRAKEI $1,131,000$1,168,000$1,029,000 3.2%9.9%22
WHAREWAKA $1,346,000$1,432,000$1,336,000 6.0%0.7%80
THAMES COROMANDEL$1,296,000$1,276,000$1,198,0001.6%8.2%1050
COOKSBEACH
COROMANDEL
$1,568,000$1,457,000$1,399,0007.6%12.1%24
$912,000$921,000$872,000 1.0%4.6%36
MATARANGI $1,238,000$1,186,000$1,129,0004.4%9.7%75
PAUANUI $1,662,000$1,574,000$1,438,0005.6%15.6%94
TAIRUA $1,266,000$1,237,000$1,164,0002.3%8.8%66
THAMES
$806,000$804,000$748,0000.2%7.8%113
WHANGAMATA $1,548,000$1,518,000$1,418,0002.0%9.2%183
WHITIANGA $1,153,000$1,161,000$1,050,000 0.7%9.8%231
WAIKATO$1,158,000$1,188,000$1,073,000 -2.5%7.9%1514
BUCKLAND $1,442,000$1,457,000$1,354,000 1.0%6.5%31
HUNTLY $581,000$584,000$560,000 0.5%3.8%126
MANGATAWHIRI
$1,384,000$1,394,000$1,237,000 0.7%11.9%24
MATANGI $1,836,000$1,912,000$1,647,000 4.0%11.5%38
MEREMERE $545,000$523,000$505,0004.2%7.9%23
NGARUAWAHIA $813,000$826,000$786,000 1.6%3.4%193
POKENO $1,115,000$1,163,000$1,057,000 4.1%5.5%192
PORTWAIKATO $663,000$657,000$647,0000.9%2.5%22
PUKEKAWA $1,232,000$1,236,000$1,110,000 0.3%11.0%23
RAGLAN $1,276,000$1,286,000$1,193,000 0.8%7.0%153
TAMAHERE $2,194,000$2,219,000$1,955,000 1.1%12.2%70
OPOTIKI $494,000$455,000$471,0008.6%4.9%59 WAIOTAHE $1,109,000$974,000$1,048,00013.9%5.8%21
ROTORUA$752,000$782,000$755,000 3.8% 0.4%993
FAIRYSPRINGS $574,000$625,000$588,000 8.2% 2.4%33
FORDLANDS $393,000$421,000$386,000 6.7%1.8%20
GLENHOLME $691,000$703,000$704,000 1.7% 1.8%80
HAMURANA $1,347,000$1,379,000$1,202,000 2.3%12.1%29
HILLCREST $628,000$657,000$640,000 4.4% 1.9%26
KAWAHAPOINT $806,000$816,000$812,000 1.2% 0.7%37
KOUTU $525,000$542,000$543,000 3.1% 3.3%21
LYNMORE $957,000$980,000$936,000 2.3%2.2%60
MAMAKU $582,000$611,000$557,000 4.7%4.5%23
MANGAKAKAHI $541,000$571,000$554,000 5.3% 2.3%54
NGONGOTAHA $734,000$743,000$721,000 1.2%1.8%67
OWHATA $691,000$712,000$687,000 2.9%0.6%104
POMARE $765,000$785,000$757,000 2.5%1.1%20
PUKEHANGI $643,000$673,000$659,000 4.5% 2.4%67
SPRINGFIELD $834,000$843,000$836,000 1.1% 0.2%50
SUNNYBROOK $739,000$760,000$739,000 2.8%0.0%33
VICTORIA $556,000$571,000$560,000 2.6% 0.7%33
WESTERNHEIGHTS $538,000$563,000$545,000 4.4% 1.3%50
TAURANGA$1,126,000$1,184,000$1,163,000 4.9% 3.2%3019
BELLEVUE $822,000$869,000$855,000 5.4% 3.9%66
BETHLEHEM $1,198,000$1,250,000$1,187,000 4.2%0.9%159
BROOKFIELD $838,000$886,000$858,000 5.4% 2.3%113
GATE PA $697,000$743,000$722,000 6.2% 3.5%128
GREERTON $759,000$802,000$770,000 5.4% 1.4%67
HAIRINI $819,000$861,000$840,000 4.9% 2.5%45
JUDEA $761,000$809,000$809,000 5.9% 5.9%69
MATUA $1,256,000$1,296,000$1,288,000 3.1% 2.5%89
MAUNGATAPU $945,000$1,000,000$985,000 5.5% 4.1%49
MOUNTMAUNGANUI $1,538,000$1,609,000$1,562,000 4.4% 1.5%445
OHAUITI $1,157,000$1,210,000$1,158,000 4.4% 0.1%122
OTUMOETAI $1,107,000$1,152,000$1,158,000 3.9% 4.4%149
PAPAMOA $969,000$1,052,000$990,000 7.9% 2.1%143
PAPAMOABEACH $1,163,000$1,238,000$1,162,000 6.1%0.1%621
PARKVALE $692,000$719,000$712,000 3.8% 2.8%59
POIKE $720,000$744,000$735,000 3.2% 2.0%24
PYESPA $1,158,000$1,230,000$1,191,000 5.9% 2.8%292
TAURANGA $1,056,000$1,121,000$1,074,000 5.8% 1.7%51
TAURANGASOUTH $962,000$1,038,000$938,000 7.3%2.6%110
WELCOMEBAY $959,000$1,017,000$940,000 5.7%2.0%205
0.9%5.6%30 KATIKATI $850,000$882,000$804,000 3.6%5.7%139 MINDEN $1,667,000$1,789,000$1,624,000 6.8%2.6%28 OMANAWA $1,407,000$1,568,000$1,369,000 10.3%2.8%29 OMOKOROA $1,182,000$1,212,000$1,142,000 2.5%3.5%177
OROPI $1,556,000$1,719,000$1,500,000 9.5%3.7%24
PAENGAROA $1,119,000$1,158,000$1,031,000 3.4%8.5%33
PUKEHINA $1,278,000$1,336,000$1,145,000 4.3%11.6%37
TAHAWAI $1,313,000$1,394,000$1,238,000 5.8%6.1%26
TEPUKE $854,000$895,000$832,000 4.6%2.6%157 TEPUNA $1,912,000$2,041,000$1,819,000 6.3%5.1%24
WAIHIBEACH $1,469,000$1,545,000$1,379,000 4.9%6.5%67
$940,000$994,000$945,000 5.4% 0.5%39
CLIVE
ESKDALE $1,354,000$1,423,000$1,352,000 4.8%0.1%23
FLAXMERE $493,000$511,000$504,000 3.5% 2.2%108
FRIMLEY $909,000$978,000$928,000 7.1% 2.0%71
HASTINGS $633,000$670,000$668,000 5.5% 5.2%63
HAVELOCKNORTH $1,263,000$1,311,000$1,291,000 3.7% 2.2%257
MAHORA $730,000$789,000$787,000 7.5% 7.2%67
MAYFAIR $631,000$676,000$674,000 6.7% 6.4%77
PARKVALE $707,000$741,000$750,000 4.6% 5.7%81
RAUREKA $642,000$706,000$701,000 9.1% 8.4%63
SAINTLEONARDS $639,000$681,000$703,000 6.2% 9.1%39 NAPIER $829,000$887,000$903,000 -6.5% -8.2%1124
$1,076,000$1,151,000$1,107,000 6.5% 2.8%33 AWATOTO $970,000$1,050,000$1,012,000 7.6% 4.2%34 BAYVIEW $1,088,000$1,174,000$1,152,000 7.3% 5.6%37 BLUFFHILL $1,086,000$1,144,000$1,144,000 5.1% 5.1%52 GREENMEADOWS $847,000$935,000$905,000 9.4% 6.4%118 HOSPITALHILL
TOKOMARU
SOUTH TARANAKI
$727,000$764,000$736,000 4.8% 1.2%20
WAITAREREBEACH $699,000$734,000$730,000 4.8% 4.2%40
MANAWATU
FEILDING
HALCOMBE
$713,000$734,000$730,000 2.9% 2.3%609
$686,000$714,000$707,000 3.9% 3.0%406
$828,000$851,000$784,000 2.7%5.6%37
HIMATANGIBEACH $553,000$563,000$571,000 1.8% 3.2%20
RONGOTEA $719,000$749,000$725,000 4.0% 0.8%41
PALMERSTONNORTH$713,000$765,000$778,000 6.8% 8.4%1513
AOKAUTERE
ASHHURST
$1,162,000$1,298,000$1,170,000 10.5% 0.7%26
$750,000$798,000$781,000 6.0% 4.0%72
AWAPUNI $660,000$711,000$711,000 7.2% 7.2%148
BUNNYTHORPE
CLOVERLEA
FITZHERBERT
HIGHBURY
HOKOWHITU
KELVINGROVE
$943,000$1,009,000$927,000 6.5%1.7%32
$584,000$632,000$664,000 7.6% 12.0%31
$969,000$1,088,000$1,070,000 10.9% 9.4%91
$567,000$602,000$605,000 5.8% 6.3%96
$851,000$907,000$907,000 6.2% 6.2%181
$842,000$899,000$892,000 6.3% 5.6%161
MILSON $671,000$705,000$716,000 4.8% 6.3%131
PALMERSTONNORTH
ROSLYN
TAKARO
$661,000$724,000$712,000 8.7% 7.2%116
$580,000$626,000$634,000 7.3% 8.5%109
$509,000$513,000$458,000 0.8%11.1%563
ELTHAM $439,000$439,000$415,0000.0%5.8%44
HAWERA $563,000$567,000$503,000 0.7%11.9%298
MANAIA $397,000$396,000$351,0000.3%13.1%23
NORMANBY $521,000$531,000$496,000 1.9%5.0%24
OPUNAKE
$497,000$499,000$467,000 0.4%6.4%55
PATEA $339,000$331,000$278,0002.4%21.9%24
WAVERLEY $449,000$442,000$374,0001.6%20.1%30
STRATFORD $562,000$573,000$539,000 1.9%4.3%198
STRATFORD $545,000$561,000$510,000 2.9%6.9%150
PAEKAKARIKI $1,026,000$1,080,000$1,118,000 5.0% 8.2%25
PARAPARAUMU $871,000$909,000$933,000 4.2% 6.6%152
PARAPARAUMUBEACH $940,000$1,009,000$1,006,000 6.8% 6.6%174
RAUMATIBEACH $945,000$1,012,000$1,007,000 6.6% 6.2%72
RAUMATI SOUTH $939,000$997,000$1,043,000 5.8% 10.0%75
WAIKANAE $992,000$1,060,000$1,052,000 6.4% 5.7%193
WAIKANAEBEACH $1,018,000$1,072,000$1,137,000 5.0% 10.5%78
LOWERHUTT$835,000$902,000$1,002,000 7.4% 16.7%1466
ALICETOWN $853,000$923,000$1,045,000 7.6% 18.4%23
AVALON $763,000$851,000$912,000 10.3% 16.3%63
BELMONT $991,000$1,077,000$1,127,000 8.0% 12.1%51
BOULCOTT $932,000$1,012,000$1,155,000 7.9% 19.3%39
EASTBOURNE $1,226,000$1,277,000$1,361,000 4.0% 9.9%44
EPUNI $859,000$921,000$1,025,000 6.7% 16.2%35
FAIRFIELD $809,000$888,000$997,000 8.9% 18.9%37
HUTTCENTRAL $1,148,000$1,252,000$1,325,000 8.3% 13.4%47
KELSON $866,000$944,000$1,022,000 8.3% 15.3%45
MAUNGARAKI $910,000$1,011,000$1,092,000 10.0% 16.7%40
NAENAE $666,000$737,000$800,000 9.6% 16.8%94
NORMANDALE $957,000$1,030,000$1,105,000 7.1% 13.4%25
PETONE $930,000$994,000$1,083,000 6.4% 14.1%104
STOKES VALLEY $684,000$751,000$795,000 8.9% 14.0%149
TAITA $647,000$726,000$776,000 10.9% 16.6%89
WAINUIOMATA $678,000$737,000$797,000 8.0% 14.9%303
WAIWHETU $783,000$879,000$975,000 10.9% 19.7%67
WATERLOO $889,000$1,010,000$1,095,000 12.0% 18.8%63 WOBURN $1,283,000$1,365,000$1,471,000 6.0% 12.8%44 MASTERTON $704,000$777,000$748,000 9.4% 5.9%600
KURIPUNI $580,000$637,000$630,000 8.9% 7.9%50 LANSDOWNE $675,000$737,000$718,000 8.4% 6.0%100 MASTERTON $588,000$650,000$631,000 9.5% 6.8%205
LOWER VOGELTOWN $743,000$762,000$685,000 2.5%8.5%36
LYNMOUTH $706,000$724,000$666,000 2.5%6.0%26
MARFELL $493,000$489,000$432,0000.8%14.1%28
MERRILANDS $816,000$828,000$754,000 1.4%8.2%66
MOTUROA $778,000$795,000$700,000 2.1%11.1%45
NEWPLYMOUTH $889,000$898,000$839,000 1.0%6.0%94 OKATO $693,000$708,000$622,000 2.1%11.4%36
SPOTSWOOD $571,000$600,000$538,000 4.8%6.1%41
STRANDON $1,017,000$1,001,000$911,0001.6%11.6%55
UPPER
SOUTH WAIRARAPA$947,000$1,030,000$996,000 8.1% 4.9%316
FEATHERSTON $646,000$717,000$699,000 9.9% 7.6%66
GREYTOWN $1,032,000$1,119,000$1,065,000 7.8% 3.1%98
MARTINBOROUGH $1,077,000$1,166,000$1,114,000 7.6% 3.3%66
UPPERHUTT$829,000$885,000$988,000 6.3% 16.1%692
BIRCHVILLE $749,000$810,000$891,000 7.5% 15.9%40
BROWNOWL $805,000$871,000$993,000 7.6% 18.9%30
CLOUSTONPARK $703,000$768,000$867,000 8.5% 18.9%26
EBDENTOWN $715,000$779,000$872,000 8.2% 18.0%50
ELDERSLEA
$767,000$836,000$924,000 8.3% 17.0%32
PINEHAVEN $807,000$871,000$952,000 7.3% 15.2%30
RIVERSTONETERRACES
$1,102,000$1,170,000$1,256,000 5.8% 12.3%28
SILVERSTREAM $942,000$991,000$1,091,000 4.9% 13.7%59
TIMBERLEA $819,000$859,000$978,000 4.7% 16.3%32
TOTARA PARK $709,000$765,000$863,000 7.3% 17.8%35
TRENTHAM $727,000$807,000$849,000 9.9% 14.4%137
WALLACEVILLE $789,000$853,000$941,000 7.5% 16.2%91
WELLINGTON$1,070,000$1,180,000$1,244,000 9.3% 14.0%2727
$1,017,000$1,150,000$1,233,000 11.6% 17.5%32
AROVALLEY
BERHAMPORE $900,000$993,000$1,092,000 9.4% 17.6%69
BROADMEADOWS $936,000$1,062,000$1,105,000 11.9% 15.3%20
BROOKLYN $1,134,000$1,269,000$1,292,000 10.6% 12.2%84
CHURTONPARK $1,128,000$1,248,000$1,309,000 9.6% 13.8%104
CROFTONDOWNS $1,089,000$1,226,000$1,256,000 11.2% 13.3%26
GRENADAVILLAGE $1,065,000$1,214,000$1,236,000 12.3% 13.8%38
HATAITAI $1,246,000$1,355,000$1,422,000 8.0% 12.4%81
ISLANDBAY $1,223,000$1,344,000$1,386,000 9.0% 11.8%93
JOHNSONVILLE $909,000$980,000$1,025,000 7.2% 11.3%148
KARORI $1,203,000$1,316,000$1,367,000 8.6% 12.0%205
KELBURN $1,590,000$1,708,000$1,776,000 6.9% 10.5%43
KHANDALLAH $1,385,000$1,575,000$1,575,000 12.1% 12.1%126
KILBIRNIE $954,000$1,053,000$1,112,000 9.4% 14.2%42
LYALLBAY $1,030,000$1,163,000$1,220,000 11.4% 15.6%46
MAUPUIA $1,001,000$1,126,000$1,092,000 11.1% 8.3%25
MELROSE $1,086,000$1,229,000$1,328,000 11.6% 18.2%28
MIRAMAR $1,109,000$1,222,000$1,239,000 9.2% 10.5%114
MOUNTCOOK $829,000$920,000$987,000 9.9% 16.0%54
MOUNTVICTORIA $1,294,000$1,402,000$1,500,000 7.7% 13.7%63
NEWLANDS $875,000$1,005,000$1,037,000 12.9% 15.6%100
NEWTOWN $1,041,000$1,122,000$1,187,000 7.2% 12.3%94
NGAIO $1,152,000$1,281,000$1,307,000 10.1% 11.9%74
NORTHLAND $1,170,000$1,283,000$1,361,000 8.8% 14.0%56
PAPARANGI $889,000$1,006,000$1,040,000 11.6% 14.5%35
ROSENEATH $1,593,000$1,732,000$1,936,000 8.0% 17.7%22
SEATOUN $1,848,000$2,077,000$2,009,000 11.0% 8.0%36
STRATHMORE PARK $1,111,000$1,250,000$1,226,000 11.1% 9.4%38
TAWA $931,000$1,020,000$1,027,000 8.7% 9.3%185
TEARO $767,000$848,000$830,000 9.6% 7.6%223
THORNDON $1,044,000$1,151,000$1,199,000 9.3% 12.9%78
WADESTOWN $1,339,000$1,462,000$1,580,000 8.4% 15.3%48
WELLINGTONCENTRAL
$576,000$642,000$634,000 10.3% 9.1%59
WILTON $1,022,000$1,143,000$1,187,000 10.6% 13.9%30
WOODRIDGE $985,000$1,101,000$1,151,000 10.5% 14.4%26
MARLBOROUGH $783,000$799,000$757,000 2.0%3.4%1094
BLENHEIM $627,000$641,000$629,000 2.2% 0.3%176
BURLEIGH $1,039,000$1,069,000$981,000 2.8%5.9%21
HAVELOCK $708,000$719,000$631,000 1.5%12.2%24
MAYFIELD $590,000$608,000$601,000 3.0% 1.8%35
PICTON $669,000$683,000$635,000 2.0%5.4%85
REDWOODTOWN $623,000$635,000$622,000 1.9%0.2%135
RENWICK $786,000$798,000$762,000 1.5%3.1%41
RIVERSDALE $568,000$585,000$584,000 2.9% 2.7%26
SPRINGLANDS $851,000$873,000$820,000 2.5%3.8%130
WAIKAWA $954,000$960,000$900,000 0.6%6.0%35
WITHERLEA $784,000$809,000$761,000 3.1%3.0%137
NELSON $832,000$867,000$857,000 4.0% 2.9%953
ATAWHAI $954,000$987,000$973,000 3.3% 2.0%57
BISHOPDALE $781,000$802,000$775,000 2.6%0.8%23
ENNERGLYNN $904,000$963,000$906,000 6.1% 0.2%31
MARYBANK $953,000$1,000,000$939,000 4.7%1.5%24
MONACO $709,000$737,000$742,000 3.8% 4.4%25
NELSON $1,137,000$1,205,000$1,162,000 5.6% 2.2%32
NELSON SOUTH $793,000$825,000$805,000 3.9% 1.5%69
STOKE $772,000$813,000$775,000 5.0% 0.4%322
TAHUNANUI $718,000$764,000$703,000 6.0%2.1%79
THEBROOK $734,000$768,000$740,000 4.4% 0.8%33
THE WOOD $817,000$853,000$853,000 4.2% 4.2%59
TOITOI $563,000$583,000$598,000 3.4% 5.9%42
WASHINGTONVALLEY $638,000$659,000$676,000 3.2% 5.6%44
TASMAN $982,000$1,011,000$959,000 -2.9%2.4%1193
APPLEBY $1,207,000$1,240,000$1,251,000 2.7% 3.5%109
BRIGHTWATER $990,000$1,037,000$963,000 4.5%2.8%62
HOPE $1,378,000$1,408,000$1,244,000 2.1%10.8%23
KAITERITERI $1,469,000$1,496,000$1,367,000 1.8%7.5%25
MAPUA $1,162,000$1,206,000$1,083,000 3.6%7.3%44
MOTUEKA $778,000$814,000$775,000 4.4%0.4%135
REDWOOD VALLEY $1,636,000$1,689,000$1,514,000 3.1%8.1%27
RICHMOND $903,000$927,000$882,000 2.6%2.4%422
RUBYBAY $1,544,000$1,590,000$1,459,000 2.9%5.8%25
TAKAKA $701,000$719,000$694,000 2.5%1.0%32
UPPERMOUTERE $1,339,000$1,366,000$1,256,000 2.0%6.6%29
WAKEFIELD $940,000$990,000$911,000 5.1%3.2%66
AKAROA $964,000$959,000$918,0000.5%5.0%36
ARANUI $446,000$469,000$429,000 4.9%4.0%114
AVONDALE $537,000$545,000$491,000 1.5%9.4%75
AVONHEAD $825,000$840,000$757,000 1.8%9.0%167
AVONSIDE $533,000$545,000$497,000 2.2%7.2%28
BECKENHAM $818,000$846,000$786,000 3.3%4.1%28
BELFAST $688,000$700,000$638,000 1.7%7.8%80
BISHOPDALE
$665,000$696,000$644,000 4.5%3.3%163
BROMLEY $501,000$529,000$476,000 5.3%5.3%53
BROOMFIELD $705,000$715,000$664,000 1.4%6.2%67
BRYNDWR $785,000$803,000$746,000 2.2%5.2%107
BURNSIDE $894,000$902,000$849,000 0.9%5.3%179
BURWOOD $686,000$694,000$613,000 1.2%11.9%177
CASEBROOK $834,000$846,000$758,000 1.4%10.0%90
CASHMERE $1,106,000$1,135,000$1,034,000 2.6%7.0%138
CHRISTCHURCHCENTRAL $695,000$719,000$645,000 3.3%7.8%327
DALLINGTON $573,000$570,000$546,0000.5%4.9%37
DIAMONDHARBOUR $814,000$864,000$735,000 5.8%10.7%30
EDGEWARE $534,000$558,000$493,000 4.3%8.3%119
FENDALTON $1,679,000$1,829,000$1,723,000 8.2% 2.6%87
HALSWELL $864,000$903,000$814,000 4.3%6.1%403
HAREWOOD $1,091,000$1,119,000$993,000 2.5%9.9%35
HEATHCOTE VALLEY
$807,000$809,000$741,000 0.2%8.9%35
HEIHEI $601,000$614,000$562,000 2.1%6.9%87
HILLMORTON $678,000$700,000$634,000 3.1%6.9%60
HILLSBOROUGH $791,000$794,000$737,000 0.4%7.3%55
HOONHAY $656,000$700,000$624,000 6.3%5.1%159
HORNBY $593,000$616,000$550,000 3.7%7.8%137
HUNTSBURY $1,101,000$1,126,000$1,039,000 2.2%6.0%59
ILAM $946,000$978,000$898,000 3.3%5.3%168
ISLINGTON
$571,000$582,000$526,000 1.9%8.6%43
LINWOOD $485,000$498,000$460,000 2.6%5.4%241
LYTTELTON
1.6%7.8%43
1.4%5.6%183
2.9%10.8%95
SPREYDON $627,000$663,000$612,000 5.4%2.5%196
ST ALBANS $861,000$874,000$829,000 1.5%3.9%395
STROWAN $1,173,000$1,271,000$1,126,000 7.7%4.2%71
SUMNER $1,103,000$1,149,000$1,069,000 4.0%3.2%48
SYDENHAM $554,000$578,000$531,000 4.2%4.3%179
TEMPLETON $806,000$864,000$730,000 6.7%10.4%49
UPPERRICCARTON $690,000$729,000$641,000 5.3%7.6%96
WAIMAIRIBEACH $942,000$952,000$885,000 1.1%6.4%26
WAINONI $494,000$493,000$462,0000.2%6.9%56
WALTHAM $498,000$510,000$460,000 2.4%8.3%106
WESTMORLAND $1,139,000$1,166,000$1,024,000 2.3%11.2%37
WIGRAM $876,000$903,000$805,000 3.0%8.8%147
WOOLSTON $546,000$551,000$492,000 0.9%11.0%271
YALDHURST $1,056,000$1,074,000$951,000 1.7%11.0%44
GLENITI
$823,000$806,000$743,0002.1%10.8%72
GLENWOOD $549,000$546,000$509,0000.5%7.9%45
HIGHFIELD $607,000$606,000$550,0000.2%10.4%80
KENSINGTON $441,000$457,000$423,000 3.5%4.3%27
MAORIHILL $567,000$574,000$551,000 1.2%2.9%27
MARCHWIEL
PARKSIDE
PLEASANTPOINT
$514,000$522,000$485,000 1.5%6.0%75
$440,000$446,000$425,000 1.3%3.5%71
$580,000$581,000$527,000 0.2%10.1%36
SEAVIEW $457,000$469,000$443,000 2.6%3.2%47
TEMUKA
WAIMATAITAI
$484,000$496,000$462,000 2.4%4.8%111
$491,000$507,000$472,000 3.2%4.0%44
WATLINGTON $448,000$462,000$444,000 3.0%0.9%28
WESTEND $487,000$488,000$452,000 0.2%7.7%65
WAIMAKARIRI
ASHLEY
$856,000$837,000$762,0002.3%12.3%1523
$1,011,000$985,000$857,0002.6%18.0%20
BURNTHILL $956,000$921,000$819,0003.8%16.7%23
EYREWELL $1,052,000$1,045,000$895,0000.7%17.5%24
FERNSIDE $1,304,000$1,265,000$1,122,0003.1%16.2%30
KAIAPOI $699,000$685,000$633,0002.0%10.4%299
LOBURN
OHOKA
OXFORD
$1,141,000$1,124,000$959,0001.5%19.0%47
$1,508,000$1,465,000$1,264,0002.9%19.3%45
KINMONT PARK $760,000$815,000$829,000 6.7% 8.3%24
MAORIHILL $1,073,000$1,132,000$1,082,000 5.2% 0.8%50
MARYHILL $596,000$638,000$670,000 6.6% 11.0%20
MORNINGTON $575,000$619,000$650,000 7.1% 11.5%59
MOSGIEL $734,000$771,000$768,000 4.8% 4.4%312
MUSSELBURGH $652,000$696,000$700,000 6.3% 6.9%33
NORTHDUNEDIN $756,000$798,000$804,000 5.3% 6.0%48
NORTH EAST VALLEY $552,000$585,000$600,000 5.6% 8.0%71
PORTCHALMERS $555,000$567,000$594,000 2.1% 6.6%22
RAVENSBOURNE $548,000$566,000$575,000 3.2% 4.7%20
ROSLYN $904,000$940,000$938,000 3.8% 3.6%38
SAINTCLAIR $915,000$968,000$933,000 5.5% 1.9%49
SAINTKILDA $512,000$538,000$553,000 4.8% 7.4%119
SAWYERSBAY $659,000$724,000$673,000 9.0% 2.1%32
SHIELHILL $776,000$865,000$850,000 10.3% 8.7%22
SOUTHDUNEDIN $412,000$438,000$455,000 5.9% 9.5%96
TAINUI $612,000$650,000$669,000 5.8% 8.5%23
WAIKOUAITI $506,000$539,000$530,000 6.1% 4.5%36
WAKARI $610,000$643,000$667,000 5.1% 8.5%38
WAVERLEY $780,000$856,000$854,000 8.9% 8.7%36
QUEENSTOWN LAKES$1,884,000$1,883,000$1,651,0000.1%14.1%1287
ALBERTTOWN $1,537,000$1,507,000$1,303,0002.0%18.0%72
ARROWTOWN $2,396,000$2,427,000$2,025,000 1.3%18.3%86
ARTHURSPOINT $1,580,000$1,595,000$1,415,000 0.9%11.7%30
FERNHILL $1,202,000$1,207,000$1,169,000 0.4%2.8%48
FRANKTON $1,130,000$1,129,000$1,084,0000.1%4.2%82
GLENORCHY $1,446,000$1,423,000$1,122,0001.6%28.9%21
JACKS POINT $1,909,000$1,909,000$1,582,0000.0%20.7%134
KELVINHEIGHTS $2,556,000$2,593,000$2,257,000 1.4%13.2%22
KINGSTON $802,000$793,000$697,0001.1%15.1%23
LAKEHAWEA $1,261,000$1,212,000$1,019,0004.0%23.7%47
LAKEHAYES $2,424,000$2,435,000$1,952,000 0.5%24.2%57
LOWERSHOTOVER $1,620,000$1,627,000$1,403,000 0.4%15.5%78
QUEENSTOWN $1,599,000$1,587,000$1,484,0000.8%7.7%139
WANAKA $1,997,000$1,984,000$1,728,0000.7%15.6%341
WAITAKI
$551,000$570,000$514,000 3.3%7.2%561
HAMPDEN $452,000$459,000$417,000 1.5%8.4%22 HOLMESHILL $587,000$606,000$538,000 3.1%9.1%45 KAKANUI $606,000$625,000$563,000 3.0%7.6%27 OAMARU $449,000$462,000$414,000 2.8%8.5%64 OAMARUNORTH $494,000$503,000$458,000 1.8%7.9%131 OTEMATATA $557,000$575,000$513,000 3.1%8.6%21 PALMERSTON $431,000$440,000$405,000 2.0%6.4%42
$426,000$438,000$424,000 2.7%0.5%81 GRASMERE $471,000$484,000$461,000 2.7%2.2%62 HARGEST $534,000$535,000$500,000 0.2%6.8%23
HAWTHORNDALE $477,000$481,000$468,000 0.8%1.9%26 HEIDELBERG $408,000$419,000$396,000 2.6%3.0%52
KINGSWELL $398,000$405,000$387,000 1.7%2.8%60
NEWFIELD $438,000$445,000$433,000 1.6%1.2%55
OTATARA $759,000$753,000$708,0000.8%7.2%80
RICHMOND $487,000$501,000$478,000 2.8%1.9%50
ROCKDALE $431,000$439,000$425,000 1.8%1.4%20
ROSEDALE $714,000$728,000$670,000 1.9%6.6%28
SEAWARDBUSH $933,000$953,000$869,000 2.1%7.4%22
STRATHERN $366,000$380,000$367,000 3.7% 0.3%77
WAIKIWI
$618,000$622,000$590,000 0.6%4.7%80
WAVERLEY $564,000$572,000$545,000 1.4%3.5%40
WINDSOR
Onething’s certain, we’ll soon be complainingabout risinghousepricesagain
What cananiconicAucklandradioadteach usaboutthepropertymarket?
Duringthe25yearsthat Ilivedin Aucklandbeforemovingto Hawke’sBay, there werea fewthings thatregularlyprovidedcomfort tome andwhichweresofamiliar as to definethe city. Theseincludedsomeoftheobviousicons– theSky Tower, theharbourbridge, andthe majesty of Rangitoto -buttherewerealsosomelessobvious,butequally reassuringthings, which willalwaysbe“Auckland” inmy memory.Theseincludethepicture frame at Shakespear RegionalPark,thestunningvistafrom almostanyvantagepointalong TamakiDrive,andthe MagnessBenrowradiocommercials.
ForthoseofyououtsideAuckland, Magness Benrowis aniconicAucklandappliancestore,which,foryears, has runa seriesofquirkyradioads featuringtheownerand one of histeam(or,atleast,they didwhen Iwas there).
Theadchangedeveryweekandalwaysfeatured some entertainingstoryorsituationasa backdroptowhatever the“dealoftheweek” was. Itwasinvariablyfunnyand engaging– andthe point,ofcourse,wastocontinueto find newwaysto repackage aconsistentandfamiliar messageofinnovation,concernforthelittleguyand pricecompetitiveness.
Inthisrespect,theMagnessBenrowadshavemuchin commonwiththeroleofthemoreresponsibleproperty commentatorsamongstus.Inthefaceofanavalanche
ofpropheciesofdoomandgloomfrom varioussources,eachtryingtooutdothe otherintheseverityoftheirpredictions,ther fewofuswhohavebeenaroundfora havingseenseveralcyclescomeandgo,aren’tpanicked abouttheprospectsforthemarketinthemediumterm.
Forus,aswithMagnessBenrow,it’smostlyabout repeatingthesamemessageindifferentways–butalways reinforcingthesamebasicpoints.Sadly,it’sadifficult messageto“reinvent”becausethereareonlysomany waystotellpeoplethatthemarketispredictable;thatit isn’tgoingtocrash;thatwe’vebeenherebefore;thatthis difficultperiodwillpass;andthatwe’lleventuallybe complainingaboutrisinghousepricesagain.
Butit alsohappenstobetrue.Weknowwhatcaused thedownturn (highinflation,which requiredextreme Reserve Bank intervention,anddraconianchanges tolendinglaws, whichmadeitalmostimpossible to borrowmoneyfor awhile)– andwe knowthat oneof these(the lendingobstacle)hasbeen partially resolved andthat lendingisgrowingagain.
We alsoknowthattheReserve Bank willeventually gettheinflation bogeymanback undercontrol –wejust don’tknowwhen –andit’sthisthat’satthe heartof our continuingnervousness.Once theReserveBankis confidentthatithastamedinflation,we’llsee interest ratesbegintostabiliseand,depending on theeconomic outlook,even startingtoedge downagain.Once this
willquicklystartto see marketagain.
ilemostofthecountry ealimpactfromthe“correction”and most propertiesarestillworthsubstantiallymorethan they weretwoyearsago, Iknowthatsomepeopleare doingittoughandworriedabouttheimpactofthose interestratesandtheirabilitytopaythe mortgage. For you,the smartapproachistotake chargeofthethings thatyoucancontrol. Theseincludefixingyourmortgage for aperiodthatwill giveyoucertaintywithoutpaying higherratesforlongerthanyouneedto.Thebest advice onthis seems to betofixforeither ayearor18months. Otherstrategiesincludetakingahardlook at your weeklybudgettoseewhetherthereare thingsthatyou candowithout fornow,talkingto yourbanktosee if there areoptionsforrelieving some of thepressure,and consideringwaystoincreaseyourhouseholdincome overthistime.
I’mnotsuggestingthatanyofthesethingsareeasy todo,and Icertainlydon’twanttotrivialisethe reality ofthestressthatyoumaybe underbutthe medium tolong-termoutlookforyourpropertyiswhatit hasalwaysbeen– itwillalmostcertainlybe worth substantiallymorethanitisrightnow.
•AshleyChurchisapropertycommentatorfor OneRoof.co.nzandarealestatebusinessowner. Emailhimatashley@nzemail.com