House prices in Sydney have slumped 11.4 per cent since their peak, according to a Domain analysis, with a “deeper” than expected national slowdown now expected.
According to Domain’s latest House Price Report, Sydney’s detached homes depreciated in value by 9.9 per cent in the 2018 calendar year and 11.4 per cent since the peak of September 2017.
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Domain has reported that Sydney’s median house price has dropped by approximately $120,000 and now sits at $1,062,619.
“House prices have fallen 11. 4 per cent from the mid-2017 peak, pushing them back to mid-2016 levels,” Domain senior research analyst Nicola Powell said.
“It’s the sharpest downturn in more than two decades, although the duration is yet to surpass the 2004-06 slump.”
Domain reported that Darwin’s house prices experienced the second sharpest annual decline (8.7 per cent), followed by Melbourne (8.4 per cent), Perth (3.3 per cent) and Brisbane (0.1 per cent).
Hobart and Adelaide were the only capital cities to record an increase in house prices of 8 per cent and 1.7 per cent, respectively, with Canberra’s values remaining stable.
Domain reported that overall, national house prices declined by 6.5 per cent in the year ending 31 December 2018, with the national median house price falling to $766,438.
Domain reported that unit prices also declined, recording an annual price drop of 4.3 per cent, with the median unit price slipping to $530,999.
Following his assessment of the latest property market trends, AMP chief economist Shane Oliver revised his expectations and now predicts a “deeper fall” in dwelling values across Sydney and Melbourne.
“For Sydney and Melbourne, our base case has been that prices would have a top to bottom fall of around 20 per cent out to 2020,” he said.
“However, the further plunge in auction clearance rates and acceleration in price falls late last year suggest a deeper fall possibly of around 25 per cent – although it’s impossible to be precise.
“This suggests around another 15 per cent fall in Sydney and more in Melbourne. A 25 per cent top to bottom drop would take prices back to where they were in late 2014/early 2015.”
Mr Oliver stated that weakness in housing market conditions, which he said was triggered by tighter credit conditions, would not be as pronounced in other capital cities, because they were “less speculative”.
“Perth and Darwin have already seen prices fall back to decade-ago levels,” he added. “Other capital cities and regional centres generally didn’t have a boom and so are unlikely to have a bust. So for the rest of Australia, flat prices to modest gains are likely.”
Mr Oliver concluded: “Taken together, this suggests a top to bottom fall in national average prices of 10 to 15 per cent, with another 5 to 10 per cent this year.”
Moreover, despite acknowledging that the fall in Australian property prices has been the “largest since the financial crisis” (GFC), chief economist at ANZ Research Richard Yetsenga said the downturn is concentrated and would not trigger a broader economic slowdown.
“This housing downturn was sparked largely by a tightening in prudential policy, which has a narrow and direct impact,” Mr Yetsenga said.
“It was not driven by monetary policy, where the impact is broad.
“On this occasion, both monetary and fiscal policy are in fact adding to demand, whereas historically, policy has tended to be tightening when house prices have started to fall.”
The ANZ economist stated that lending restrictions imposed by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority prompted “bottom up” credit policy reforms from credit institutions, which have remained in place despite the regulator’s decision to ease some of its measures.
Mr Yetsenga said the housing market downturn would likely be a “textbook adjustment” provided prudential standards are “correctly calibrated” for the tightening in bottom-up standards.
[Related: Property price falls could exceed 20%]