Global Property Archives - Amora Escapes https://amoraescapes.com/tag/global-property/ Property 101 Sun, 10 Dec 2023 00:59:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://amoraescapes.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Amora-Escapes-Favico.png Global Property Archives - Amora Escapes https://amoraescapes.com/tag/global-property/ 32 32 Short Supply of Homes to Push Global Property Prices Higher at Slower Pace https://amoraescapes.com/2023/12/10/short-supply-of-homes-to-push-global-property-prices-higher-at-slower-pace/ Sun, 10 Dec 2023 10:46:15 +0000 https://amoraescapes.com/?p=5084   BENGALURU, Dec 5 (Reuters) – Global property prices in most major markets will rise…

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BENGALURU, Dec 5 (Reuters) – Global property prices in most major markets will rise over the next two years, albeit at a slightly slower pace than predicted three months ago as strong demand and tight supply overshadow higher interest rates, a Reuters poll found.

Home prices across the developed world have defied analysts’ expectations, as they predicted at the start of the year prices would register double-digit falls from COVID-19-era peaks. In most markets they will end the year on a positive note.

While price rises are expected to continue into next year and 2025, higher mortgage rates and the lack of supply of affordable homes will restrict prices from rising too much.

The latest Reuters polls of over 100 housing market strategists taken between Nov. 15 and Dec. 4 showed property prices rising in five of the eight major property markets surveyed for next year and in all of them in 2025.

“Values are underpinned at the moment by the fact there’s low stock availability and that is defending prices. The fact prices haven’t fallen very much and actually in many markets are beginning to rise again is down to the fact the stock is very low,” said Liam Bailey, head of research at Knight Frank.

“Very few vendors are bringing their properties forward into the market at the moment because they’re either trying to protect their current debt costs by not moving properties and not porting their mortgages,” he said.

Of the major housing markets polled – U.S., Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Germany and Dubai – prices were forecast to go up between 1.3% to 5% in 2025, while estimates for India were set to surpass 7%.

That outlook was still good news for property owners who at the beginning of the year were anticipating a significant dip in value of their homes over expectations the global economy will enter a recession this year.

But that would also mean affordability will remain a concern, especially for first-time buyers who for years have been waiting on the sidelines to get on the property ladder.

Still, a strong 71% majority, 65 of 91 housing strategists, who answered an additional question said purchasing affordability for first-time homebuyers will improve over the coming year.

While many analysts, 51 of 84, who answered a separate question said the supply of affordable homes will improve over the coming two to three years, only 10 among them expected it to improve to a point where it can sufficiently address the demand.

“If you look at construction cost plus land costs, it’s difficult to deliver affordable housing viably. I think lack of housing is probably likely to be a feature of most developed markets…for the medium-term (5 years),” added Knight Frank’s Bailey.

Average U.S. home prices were seen rising 2.7% this year and 1.8% in 2024. That was higher than a September survey where prices were forecast to flat line in both years.

Australian home prices, which have recovered all of their 2022 losses since finding a floor in January, were expected to rise 8.0% this year and another 5.0% next year.

New Zealand property prices were forecast to rise 4.0% next year and 5.0% in 2025 compared with expected rises of 5.0% and 6.0% in an August poll.

While home prices in Germany and Britain were predicted to fall 2.8% and 2.0% respectively next year, in both markets they were forecast to rise around 2-3% in 2025.

The once red-hot Canadian housing market, where prices surged about 50% during the coronavirus pandemic, is expected to stagnate in 2024 and then rise 3.3% in 2025.

Buoyed by demand from high earners, home prices in India will beat consumer inflation to rise 6.8% this year and next.

Source : Reuters

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Why the Global Property Market Will Never Return to Pre-pandemic Conditions https://amoraescapes.com/2023/11/23/why-the-global-property-market-will-never-return-to-pre-pandemic-conditions/ Thu, 23 Nov 2023 13:48:40 +0000 https://amoraescapes.com/?p=4988   Despite punishing levels of mortgage debt and rental unaffordability causing global property prices to…

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Despite punishing levels of mortgage debt and rental unaffordability causing global property prices to fluctuate, experts predict that house prices around the world are unlikely to return to “normal”.

New research by Oxford Economics has forecast that house prices around the developed world are unlikely to normalise to their pre-COVID-19 rates. While researchers found that house prices have been tapering down in most major global markets this year, they emphasised that this downturn is unlikely to continue further.

Instead of house prices coming down, the firm predicted that housing unaffordability will be corrected by a gradual increase in income.

According to a report by Oxford Economics, authored by senior economist Tamara Basic Vasiljev, houses post-pandemic have been severely unaffordable to purchase but highly profitable to own.

Nevertheless, the research firm insisted that factors aside from a house price reduction will be the more likely contributors to a restabilisation of housing affordability.

When it comes to mortgage rates, the report admitted that mortgages around the world “look punishingly high”, but argued that this alone will not be enough to cause a reduction in house prices.

With mortgage debt levels varying by household and region, Ms Basic Vasiljev reminded market watchers that mortgage rates “might not be relevant for a significant proportion of both households in general and home owners in particular”.

“It might skew other indicators of the housing market, bringing volumes down as people are reluctant to move and negotiate a new mortgage, but it affects house prices less than what you might expect,” she said.

The report also indicated that bank lending standards around the world appear to be on track to ease, especially outside the US.

“It does seem that the worst is behind us in terms of household sector credit,” Ms Basic Vasiljev shared.

She concluded that labour markets, not finance, are the crystal ball for future housing affordability.

“So far unemployment rates have gone up only modestly; real wage growth is positive, though slowing; participation is yet to recover to pre-pandemic trends; and unemployment is no longer a very popular search term in Google trends,” the economist stated.

“This will certainly be a mitigating factor on any financial pressures that the housing markets are experiencing amidst the mortgage rates surge.”

Ultimately, with a global economic slowdown “looming” and housing affordability at record lows, the research firm does not predict a slowing in house prices is on the horizon, in Australia or beyond.

Source : RealEstateBusiness

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