Powered by MOMENTUM MEDIA
the adviser logo
Sales & Marketing

Hot Property: The biggest property headlines from the week 25-29 January

by Reporter12 minute read
Hot Property: The biggest property headlines from the week 25-29 January

Here’s the weekly round-up of the biggest news stories from across Momentum Media’s property titles for the week ending 29 January. 

Welcome to The Adviser’s weekly round-up of the headline stories and news that’s important not only for the real estate sector, but also for the state of property in Australia more broadly. 

To compile this list, not only do we consider the week’s most-read stories and the news that matters to you, but we curate it to include stories from our sister brands that also have an impact on the Australian property landscape.

Lenders extend cashback offers

==
==

Several lenders and their subsidiaries have extended their cashback offers, while one lender has extended its LMI discount offering.

Westpac, St.George Bank, BankSA and Bank of Melbourne have extended their home loan refinance cashback offers, effective 22 January 2021.

ASIC to update ACL process following security breach

The financial services regulator is working on “alternative arrangements” for submitting credit licence applications, after identifying a cyber “incident” on one of its servers.

Neolender CEO reveals broker plans

The co-founder and CEO of new mortgage lender WLTH has revealed his plans for distribution, which include the broker channel.

The Brisbane-based digital lending and payments provider, WLTH, launched into market earlier this month, announcing its intention to issue $1.23 billion worth of residential and commercial loans by the end of the 2022 financial year (FY22).

Loan repayment deferrals phasing out

As the COVID-19 repayment deferral period concludes at the end of this quarter, some lenders have stopped accepting new applications for deferrals.

National Australia Bank has confirmed that it stopped accepting new mortgage deferral applications last week (20 January 2021) to allow for two-month deferrals finishing at the end of March.

Major network reveals leadership shakeup

Gearing itself towards growth in 2021, one of Australia’s biggest real estate groups has announced a number of new appointments, starting at the top.

LJ Hooker Group stated that the alignment of its leadership structure and a number of executive and senior appointments “will see the business deliver a consistent, targeted strategy in how it drives performance and supports its offices and people across the group”.

‘Skin in the game’: Network members buy business

A NSW franchise network has been purchased by a group of its members, with a number of high-profile corporate representatives and agency principals now named as owners.

Team members working within and under the Laing+Simmons Corp have agreed to purchase the company from its current owner, Dexar Group, for an undisclosed sum.

The Agency reports record revenue

The Agency’s half-yearly financial update looks to confirm a strong balance sheet in the face of the recent attempt by Magnolia to place the organisation into voluntary administration.

The Tasmanian agency where no one’s left at work

Staff retention, wellness initiatives and workplace culture all go hand in hand, according to one Launceston-based agency director.

Director and property manager at Key2 property Tameka Smith has said that starting out as a new business, staff retention was an extremely important consideration for the business.

Apartment rents tumble off the cliff in Sydney and Melbourne

Apartment rents have fallen off a cliff in Sydney and Melbourne, on the back of collapsing demand among internationals students and migrants, and changes to personal finances.

Property sector jobs in demand as property boom arrives

Despite a COVID-induced economic downturn, real estate remained resilient, ultimately emerging as one of the most in-demand jobs markets in Australia amid the pandemic.

LinkedIn’s Jobs on the Rise report has revealed a growing demand for real estate professionals as the COVID-instigated jobs transformation encouraged people to move away from big cities in search of affordable housing.

Brisbane, Adelaide prices tipped to grow as investors zero in on smaller cities

Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth are tipped to experience the strongest price growth this year, as 19 per cent of existing investors explore new purchases, an expert has said.

CoreLogic Research director Tim Lawless is forecasting a property price boost of between 7 per cent and 10 per cent in 2021, with the smaller capital cities tipped to benefit the most.

[Related: Hot Property: The biggest property headlines from the week 18-22 January]

suburbs

JOIN THE DISCUSSION

You need to be a member to post comments. Become a member for free today!