Aussie house prices to plunge 15%

Leith van Onselen, July 28, 2022

Data from property research firm PropTrack shows that dwelling prices increased by 34% nationwide between February 2020 to June 2022.

However, PropTrack has forecast that housing prices will fall by 2-5% by the end of 2022 and a further 7-10% in 2023. The most expensive cities of Sydney and Melbourne are forecast to lead the falls, with prices declining between 3% and 6% this year and 9% to 12% in 2023.

Cameron Kusher of PropTrack says the series of official interest rate increases in recent months has accelerated the slowdown in house price growth. He expects the cash rate to rise to between 2.5 per cent and three per cent by the end of 2022:

The recent run-up in prices, coupled with reducing borrowing capacities as interest rates rise, is likely to see price falls broaden and then accelerate further into 2023, with the more expensive cities expected to record the largest price falls. Nationally, we are forecasting prices to fall by between -2% and -5% by the end of this year and by a further -7% to -10% by the end of next year.

By the end of this year, we expect the cash rate to rise to between 2.5% and 3%, with some further increases in early 2023. Thereafter, we expect rates to remain on hold with the potential for them to be reduced in late 2023 or early 2024.

Whether these forecasts are met obviously depends on how aggressively the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) hikes interest rates.

The RBA’s own modelling says “that a 200-basis-point increase in interest rates from current levels would lower real housing prices by around 15% over a two-year period”. Based on this, a 2.5% cash rate implies an 18% real house price fall  nationally (~12% nominal), whereas a 3% cash rate implies a 22% real house price fall (~16% nominal). Sydney’s and Melbourne’s house price declines would obviously be greater than average, due to their more extreme valuations.

The ball is in the RBA’s court as to how far Australian house prices plunge. And the way it is heading, Australia is facing its biggest house price bust in living memory.

Latest News
Macro Afternoon
Gas cartel gives NSW a good rogering
Aussie renters are the world’s most insecure
Coalition goes into bat for international student rorters
China PMIs slip below the waves
Wage inflation scaremongering never stops
Aussie retail recession deepens as households buckle
Melbourne residents face high-rise slum future
Buy AI or copper?
Faith in Albonomics craters
CBA: RBA to cut rates in November
Will Australian dollar short squeeze?
Macro Morning
India won’t save iron ore
Perth home values jump 2% in April
Deposit gap scuttles home ownership dreams
“Labor can’t manage money, Labor can’t manage borders”
Macro Afternoon
Reserve Bank battles rising consumer gloom
Betting markets back Biden
Australia’s cafe boom turns bust
Melbourne is Australia’s biggest house price loser
Cut immigration and interest rates
Grattan Institute proposes raw prawn power Australia
Australians face a decade of housing pain
Global soft landing or no landing?
Stocks rocket refueling
Property Council lies about rental crisis
Macro Morning
Voters turn hard against Albo’s extreme immigration