Results Mentoring

[NEWSLETTER] From 40% CRASH to 15% BOOM in 12 months!?

It’s amazing how much has changed in the property market in just a few months.

Cast your mind back to this time last year. Do you recall what was in the news headlines about the property market?

Let’s take a brief trip down memory lane…

 

Late 2018 – predictions of a 40% CRASH!

 In September last year, with property prices around the country falling, Channel Nine’s ’60 Minutes’ ran a feature with the sensational and alarming headline:

 

“Aussie housing prices could fall by as much as 40% in next 12 months”

When the article aired, I received numerous phone calls and emails from investors and home owners who were terrified about what this meant for home values – and whether they should sell up fast!

At the time, we wrote our own article explaining why such a property market crash was extremely unlikely, encouraging investors not to panic.

 

Clearly we were proven right, as a 40% price crash DIDN’T happen!

(In fact, according to market analysts CoreLogic, the peak-to-trough fall in Australian house prices was only a little over 8% before prices began recovering mid-2019.)

  While suggestions of a 40% price fall were a bit extreme, many analysts believed the trend of falling prices was entrenched, and could go on for quite some time…

 

 “Australia’s property downturn will be the longest and largest since the 1980s, say Morgan Stanley”
– SMH, 11 Oct 2018

As Christmas approached, investors fretted about what the Financial Services Royal Commission would mean for lending restrictions (not much, as it turned out) and worried that a Labour victory at the upcoming election could spell the end of negative gearing and CGT tax benefits.

 

The gloomy mood was reflected in the media, with an ABC News headline forecasting more price falls to come:

“House prices in sharpest decline since global financial crisis and ‘will continue to trend lower'”
– ABC News, 3 Dec 2018

 

Early 2019 – prices dropping with “no end in sight”!

The New Year got off to a rough start, with global credit ratings agency Fitch Ratings releasing a report in January predicting that Australia’s housing market would under-perform every other developed country in 2019:

 

“Australia to see worst 2019 house price fall: report”

– ABC News, 16 Jan 2019

 

In February, forecasts of a property market “BLOODBATH” dominated the headlines, with some in the media predicting 40-50% price falls ahead…

 

“‘Let the bloodbath begin’: House prices in Sydney and Melbourne ‘could halve’ in the worst crash since the 1890s”

– news.com.au, 20 Feb 2019

 

Based on our own analysis and forecasts however, we didn’t see any kind of property market Armageddon on the horizon.

Instead we predicted that price falls would moderate, and that property values would soon level out before beginning to climb again.

Still, the media couldn’t see it (yet), with headlines forecasting worse to come:

 

“House prices keep dropping – and there’s no end in sight”

– the Guardian, 21 Mar 2019

 

In April, investment analysts Moody’s predicted that prices would fall further, by another 10%, but offered a glimmer of hope that growth might return in 2020:

 

“House prices set to fall another 10pc before 2020 rebound, Moody’s Analytics says”

– ABC News, 9 April 2019

 

May 2019: The turning point…

In May – to the surprise of many – the Coalition won the Federal Election, and just a week later APRA abolished a significant lending restriction (the 7% interest test on loan applications).

Our own analysis was already showing the market levelling out, and we went on record to call the bottom of the market in May. 

On May 25th, I declared to a room of around 200 property investors that we had reached a turning point, and that the market in much of the country would shortly begin rising again.

Most analysts and market commentators at the time believed the market still had further to fall, or that it was too early to tell, or that the market might only start to bottom-out a year later in 2020.

 

Since May…

The media started to get a sense that something was different around June/July, but they weren’t convinced:

 

“Housing market at its slowest in 12 years – but is that about to change?”

– ABC News, 10 Jun 2019

 

But eventually, market commentators started waking up to the fact that the market had shifted – and the headlines turned from negative to positive…

 

“National property prices increase for first time since 2017”

– 9 News, 1 Aug 2019

 

By September there was no denying the new momentum in the market – at least on the East coast:

 

“House price surge in Sydney and Melbourne drags index higher”

– ABC News, 2 Sep 2019

 

Most recently…

 

Lately, the headlines have changed from “doom” to BOOM!

 

“New property boom looks imminent with a range of indicators pointing to price growth”
– news.com.au, 30 Oct 2019

 

Indeed, house prices in Sydney and Melbourne have rebounded off their lows at a record pace…

 

“Melbourne, Sydney record biggest property price gains in a decade”
– news.com.au, 1 Nov 2019

 

…and the forecasts have shifted from prices falling “with no end in sight”, to predictions of double-digit property price growth in 2020!

 

“Sydney, Melbourne prices to surge up to 15pc”
– Financial Review, 14 Nov 2019

 

From “BLOODBATH” to “BOOM” in a handful of months!

The obvious lesson, looking back at the headlines of the last year, is: do not take your property investing advice from newspapers!

But why did the media get it so wrong?

And how were we able to confidently pick the bottom of the market, when so many “experts” couldn’t see it?

The reason is that every most analysts and commentators treat housing in this country as if it is one single market where prices everywhere move the same way…

 

It is not!

 

The Australian property market is made up of over 15,000 individual suburbs and towns, each representing a discrete market with its own unique dynamics.

 

Every suburb performs differently, and at any point in time there will be suburbs that are rising, suburbs that are flat, and suburbs where property prices are in decline.

The trick – and the key to understanding and predicting the property market accurately – is to be able to tell which specific suburbs are most likely to rise next, and which ones will fall.

Sydney, for instance, is a collection of more than 650 discrete suburbs, all behaving differently.

Right now, Sydney’s overall median house price is rising – but this disguises the truth that while some suburbs are rising, and rising strongly, many are not. Some are actually in rapid decline.

And the forecasts for price movement at the individual suburb level are quite mixed too.

It is only by understanding how the market behaves at the individual suburb level, that you can really assess how the local market is likely to perform over the coming months.

Once you learn how to to “read” the property market at the individual suburb level, you can ignore media hype about booms or busts, and make more informed, more confident investing decisions. (Not to mention sleeping easier rather than worrying about your property investments.)

Keep an eye out for coming live training workshops and webinars where the Results Mentoring team and I will be teaching effective techniques for analysing the property market – right down to the individual suburb level – along with many other great practical strategies and tactics for maximising your property investing success!

 

Until next time,

Invest wisely! 

 

– Simon Buckingham

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