REINZ Real Estate Magazine - Autumn 2021

Page 22

FEATURE

Financialisation of New Zealand housing market is driving house price increases

Ruth Berry, Director, BBHTC National Science Challenge

In Aotearoa, New Zealand, our housing stock is now seen as a major commodity and this financialisaton of the housing market is driving exponential increases in house prices. At the same time, home ownership is still a dominant aspiration for New Zealanders.

Evidence from Building Better Homes, Towns and Cities (BBHTC) National Science Challenge shows that it is not land costs which determine whether houses are built or not, it’s about what people can sell those houses for on the open market, with a profit margin that is attractive to banks and equity lenders. When this occurs and in the absence of strong policy direction, housing becomes a vehicle for investment and financialisation is normalised. Despite delivering often untaxed, windfall gains only for some sectors of the market - property investors, speculators and owner-occupiers. “Our evidence shows this financialisation is fuelled by, and fuels, heated housing prices, cycles of liquidity and constraint and reduction of access to owner occupation,” explains Challenge Director Ruth Berry. “We see this play out in the report released recently by Statistics New Zealand that shows our home ownership rates are the lowest they have been in 70 years.” The Housing in Aotearoa report reveals a sobering picture – only 64.5% of Kiwis own their own homes and house prices have been rising at a faster rate than wages over the past five years. Māori and Pacific home ownership statistics are much worse with

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The Real Estate Institute of New Zealand

fewer than 50% of Māori and fewer than 40% of Pacific people owning their own homes. Māori and Pacific home ownership is declining at a faster rate than for those with European ethnicity. In Auckland, median house sales price mid-2020 came in at about 11.5 times the median household income. The evidence shows the flow-on effect is that market forces influence what is being built and bought. As a result, it becomes unprofitable to build lower quartile value housing because it only suits a certain sector of the market. Without intervention or support, the market will not deliver homes in the lower quartile of value, our most needed. “This leads to the type of environment that we are seeing now with runaway house prices and a lack of low cost, new and affordable housing being available to low and modest income people,” says Ms Berry. BBHTC researchers looked at the availability of financing for developers to understand how the housing market has slowly become financialised. What the evidence shows is that banks do not accept risk, rather they require developers to make substantial margins and


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Articles inside

Looking ahead in 2021

3min
pages 16-17

Potential changes to the Unit Titles Act may be on the way…

5min
pages 64-66

AML: Expired passports guidance

3min
pages 62-63

Supporting buyers and sellers to navigate a hot market – meeting your obligations under the Code of Conduct

3min
pages 60-61

Value-adding renovation ideas for $5k, $10k, $20k or $50k

2min
page 59

5 life-changing tips for real estate sales people

5min
pages 56-57

Invest in personal branding and social selling

5min
pages 54-55

Tax doesn’t mean taxing your brain

5min
pages 52-53

Building a smart city – from the ground up

4min
pages 50-51

5 reasons real estate agents should use video

2min
page 46

New technologically advanced automated valuation model from REINZ

2min
page 45

New Plymouth riding regional New Zealand’s success

3min
pages 38-39

Methamphetamine - more clarity required for landlords and property managers

3min
page 35

Tax consideration for residential property investors and property managers

4min
pages 32-33

RTA Amendment Act 2020

3min
pages 30-31

Rural momentum set to continue into 2021 as demand exceeds supply

4min
pages 26-27

Virtual innovation during COVID-19

5min
pages 24-25

House prices in Wairoa grew at fastest rate in NZ during 2020

2min
pages 14-15

Financialisation of New Zealand housing market is driving house price increases

3min
pages 22-23

Apartment living has never had more appeal

4min
pages 20-21

Fuelling up for the future

3min
pages 36-37

Climate risks could impact loans

4min
pages 28-29

Number of million dollar plus properties sold in 2020 reaches new record levels

4min
pages 18-19
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