Posted by Rob Honeycombe on 30 July 2008
Open the paper today and you’re flooded with offers of 8.1% this and 8.25% that – just lock your pennies up for a year or more. It’s tempting many investors who’ve sold out of other assets, and especially those that want simple security. Meantime though there’s a very bright spot for investors who’ve kept their money in property – rents are rocketing up.
Brisbane’s just recorded another big jump, with the June Quarter showing a 6% rise in median rents for 2 bed apartments. The inner-city suburbs leapt 9%, and yes that’s in just three months. Suburbs like New Farm, the Gabba and Albion all clocked double-digit growth so this is without doubt a boom market. Three bed houses are also up 5% in the inner city and the cause is ‘nose on your face’ stuff: we don’t have enough rental homes. There’s now less properties in the total rental pool than this time last year – in the CBD itself we lost 399 rental homes for the year. (A 2 bed apartment in postcode 4000 now rents for $520/week!) Owner-residents continue to soak up apartments and there’s ongoing conversions to short-term “holiday” leasing.
Commentators often look to gross return figures to kick-start a market. Once the yields rise high enough investors seem to prick their ears up, with 5.5% often considered the ‘hurdle rate’. So here’s three of our current sales listings: 6.2%, 6.4% and 6.8% (the annual rent divided by the price) – and they’re all modern city apartments priced under $550,000. Prices have been flat for a few months now so with rents rising fast these new, strong yields should be no surprise. It’s simple maths.
These are gross returns of course so they aren’t comparable to the bank’s 8%. But if you believe there’s capital growth to come the holding costs for today’s property owner can be pretty minimal. It’s not often we see this meeting of two such extreme markets, with sales prices flat and rents surging ahead at record rates. There’s a good choice for buyers today but that may be short-lived as sellers have stopped flooding the market. The latest RPData stats show new listing numbers have been trending downwards since early May.
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Tags: Residential Tenancies Authority, RP Data
Posted in Brisbane's rental market, Brisbane's sales market, Woolloongabba | No Comments »
Posted by admin on 30 July 2008
If you’re one of the many people who believe parking in Brisbane is expensive you’re spot on. We didn’t know exactly how it compared to other major cities throughout the world – until now. Colliers recently released its first ever global parking report that surprisingly enough includes 3 Australian cities in the top 10 for monthly unreserved parking rates; Sydney, Brisbane and Perth, with Melbourne just outside at number 11 on the list.
So where exactly does Brisbane rank? In the top five! London City wins (?!) at $1,167 followed by London’s West End at $1,136. Sydney ranks third at $775 with Hong Kong following with a monthly rate of $742. Brisbane rounds out the top five at $592, and yes it’s ahead of whopping big metropolises such as New York, Tokyo and Boston. Not that we doubt the research – but we thought it’d be fun to call the USA and check out those New York carparks for ourselves because we happen to have an American work experience guy here to speak the lingo (he’s from the hood – yo what up?!). And yep, Mahmoud at the Regency Garage Corp on Manhattan’s Second Street tells us today that they charge just $414 for a monthly pass!
There are a couple of factors that are attributed to the high parking rates in Brisvegas. Australia’s thriving resource based economy and surging currency (all rates are in US dollars) are the two most responsible for the boom. Good news for parking is that even though Brisbane’s monthly parking rates are number five our daily parking rates are somewhere in the middle of the pack when compared to other major world financial centres.
Tags: Brisbane traffic, carparking Brisbane
Posted in trends in Brisbane property | No Comments »
Posted by admin on 9 July 2008
If you’ve noticed your neighbours pacing up and down their yard lately there mightn’t be any need for concern! There’s a relatively new and growing trend for home owners who love their address but not their house: push it over and build another! Many of inner Brisbane’s houses were built prior to 1946 and they usually carry the Council’s character protection limitations. But now the suburbs that are home to those sexy boxes built in the 1950’s and 60’s are growing in appeal – and value – to the point where demolition and new construction is starting to pop up more regularly. Of course new homes on split blocks (1’s into 2’s) have been going up for years, but we’re now seeing single homes bulldozed for larger family dwellings. One savvy home-owner we spoke to recently has a brand new house in planning for his soon to be vacant Camp Hill block, and that’s a suburb where the trend is really taking hold, especially along ridgelines with city views.
A good move? It’s hard to make the case as an investment in the short to mid term, possibly replacing your ‘worst house best street’ with a ‘best by a mile house’, and the area’s median value dragging your price down. But from a lifestyle point of view a new home can make a lot of sense. You know the neighbourhood and there’s no surprises – and you needn’t commute to the outer burbs to have low maintenance, stylish living.
The most visible examples of rebuilding are in the CBD at the moment, with “Fridays” and the Black Ink office building in Eagle Street crumbling before our eyes, their former sizes deemed underutilization of prime real estate. Stockland’s Brisbane jewel, the Eagle Street Pier, will soon be levelled to make way for a 70 storey twin tower project, pulling the plug on some of our most popular riverside eateries. In high demand locations it’s a natural course of events, but in a city as young as Brisbane it’s still surprising to see.
There’s hope too for those who own older units and strata-titled property around the city. Developer Devine Group recently amalgamated a key piece of Alice Street by buying out dozens of apartment owners in adjoining buildings. One investor sold their $350,000 apartment to Devine for $800,000 – after owning it for just two years! The land overlooks the Botanical Gardens and its 8 storey buildings were less than 30 years old. An extreme example perhaps but it’s a solid sign that, in Brisbane’s inner city, rising values are yet to drive plenty more change in the property market.
Suddenly those tired old ‘six packs’ are looking just a bit more interesting!
Tags: Brisbane neighbourhoods, character protection Brisbane, Eagle Street Pier, investment property, new housing
Posted in Brisbane's future & new infrastructure, architecture and renovation, trends in Brisbane property | No Comments »
Posted by admin on 9 July 2008
The outcry from BCC’s recent rates hike for apartment owners is not going away anytime soon, and we understand a legal challenge may be in the wind. In his recent budget the Lord Mayor announced a new loading for the ratings formula on medium and high density property. In one apartment tower in the CBD a rented apartment’s general rates bill will go from $517 to $3,584 (yes a $3000 rise, and that’s before the water, sewerage and other charges) And this is a fairly typical city building with apartments worth $500,000 to $600,000. Not penthouse owners with cash spilling from their balconies, but regular mum and dad investors renting their apartments to Brisbane’s growing inner-city population.
All apartment, townhouse and unit owners in Brisbane City Council will be affected. When the first bills hit in January Council will be inundated by shocked owners – for now most of us just can’t follow the convoluted new rates formula to calculate how big the impact will be. The big legal question is whether BCC has a legal right to impose a loading on a particular type of residential property.
You’d hope they did their homework before making the change but if not, a quick political backflip must be in order. With such large sums at stake we’d expect this issue to stay in the news for a long time to come.
Tags: Brisbane City Council
Posted in property taxes and rates etc | No Comments »