Business

Record weekend as buyers battle it out at auctions

Marika Dobbin
March 1, 2010

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Property: heartbreaking prices

Property editor Marika Dobbin takes a look at the property results from the weekend.

MELBOURNE's property market set a record of more than $1 billion in total sales last week on the back of a searing-hot auction market.

Agents reported it was the biggest opening weekend for auctions in at least seven years, with the cooler weather no deterrent for crowds of more than 100 people at several auctions.

Many would-be buyers were left further frustrated as 87 per cent of 967 homes were sold under the hammer. This time last year the clearance rate was 73 per cent for 587 auctions.

The fierce competition will only make more properties less affordable in the inner and middle suburbs, where auctions are concentrated.

The Real Estate Institute of Victoria reported $701 million in auction sales and an additional $324 million in private sales.

The total surpassed even the spending spree before Christmas and the big weekends of the 2007 property boom.

Buyers advocate Mal James said the market for homes over $1 million was leading the surge, with nearly three bidders at every auction.

''It is not easy for buyers out there,'' he said. ''There's more than one buyer for almost everything on sale.''

There were nine bidders at the auction of a historic St Kilda West mansion that belonged to the RSL. The property sold for $4.1 million in front of a crowd of more than 150 people.

Buyers were most frustrated in the inner south and east, with almost every apartment in suburbs such as South Melbourne and Albert Park sold at auction.

Mark Armstrong of Property Planning Australia said it was investors who were driving demand for inner-suburban apartments in Melbourne.

Mr Armstrong said he expected investor activity would propel price growth until mid next year.

But such activity would be subject to interest rate rises, he said.

Alistair Craig of Jellis Craig said the last Saturday of every month was usually busy, especially before a long weekend, but this weekend had been exceptional.

''It's a very strong market out there, with lots of demand and a shortage of properties,'' he said.

The auction market will wind down again for next Monday's Labour Day holiday, but there are about 730 auctions expected the following weekend.

The Reserve Bank will meet tomorrow to consider interest rates.

66 comments so far

  • After seeing the disaster in Hawai where local people are priced out of the property market by overseas investors from wealthy countries such as Japan, I was horrified to hear we have relaxed the eligibility criteria for overseas buyers. Who are the big buyers from the weekend?

    Commenter
    Rose
    Location
    Victoria
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 8:48AM
  • Madness.

    Commenter
    Dom
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 8:42AM
  • We have heard from friends (originally from overseas) who has bought and sold property recently, that it is the overseas buyers who are buying these expensive properties. Why are they allowed to do so? Our children cannot afford to buy a house. Can a list of where the buyers are from be published please?

    Commenter
    Dags
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 9:16AM
  • I went to nearly 10 auctions over the weekend in some of the mentioned suburbs in this article. Not a single overseas buyer won (nor did i even hear them bid) at one of these auctions. The fact of the matter is, Australia is a rich country and we have no gripe in having large mortgages. We are driving prices up not overseas buyers?!?!

    Commenter
    People are still complaining?
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 9:10AM
  • Hello all, Thanks for all your comments, keep them coming.   The overseas-buyer issue is getting a lot of traction in recent weeks, probably because of frustration about prices. Because the authority measuring this trend is the Foreign Investment Review Board, and it is notoriously secretive, all we have is anecdotal reports from agents.   Agents are reporting up to 40 per cent of sales in some suburbs, such as Balwyn, are to overseas buyers. However, that figure could be inflated to try talk up the market. Also, many agents have reported the trend waxes and wanes on the Aussie dollar which is strong at the moment.

    Commenter
    Marika Dobbin
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 12:17PM
  • The whole market is still doing a correction. Current market value for house are still cheap.

    The government should build more apartments and high density livings around the city areas. This will be environmentally good and save a lot of cost as well.

    If people want luxury, like a house with a piece of land, let them pay a premium on it.

    Create more supply by building more apartments around the city and rive! Lowering their price ! We love these apartments.

    Commenter
    Raju
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 9:08AM
  • This is wonderful new for investors, the real estate agents and developers, not to mention all the revenue in stamp duty for the State Government. All this population growth, designed by Kevin Rudd's fetish for a "big Australia", has created a land and housing "boom", and people in this growth industry are becoming wealthy. However, we used to be a land of home-owners. Even people working in factories could afford to buy their own home, but now even professionals are being locked out. Where is the justice if a few elite become wealthy at the expense of the general public, the taxpayers, the existing population of Australia? The demand for housing, caused by population growth driven mainly by immigration, is displacing young people and families from the housing market.

    Commenter
    Vivienne
    Location
    Heidelberg Vic
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 9:00AM
  • The fact to me is that our house prices are still cheap enough -- You can see the auction rate --- high clearance rate indicates that is obviously cheap enough to get sold.

    I guess people who cannot afford save some money by reducing the luxury life like stop
    - purchasing redundant cloths
    - purchasing upto date electronics
    - going overseas for travels.

    With average salary, it just take two years for you to get first down payment for even one person.

    My normal living expense is just 30000.00 and for an average salary person (beside couples) it just take two years to save around 60000.00 for a down payment of a 550k house.

    So I think the house price are still too cheap.
    Also remember Money today is worth much more than Money tomorrow. After 30 years, you paid twice the purchase price (because of interest). The price still low after considering the inflation.

    Commenter
    Martin
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 8:58AM
  • Martin is the poster boy for debt slavery!

    Commenter
    wasabu
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 9:35AM
  • @Raju
    I support your arguments and think Victoria government should only allow apartments to be built in the city fringe say within 20 kilometers in future.

    This may increase those houses price temporarily in these areas but in the low run it will solve the housing problem. The supply of the apartments should be increased dramatically and actually it can.

    By increasing the supply, the cost will be lowered. It is environmental friendly solution by saving a lot of transport costs.

    So let the council changes rules and allow more high rise buildings and apartment. We need them.

    Commenter
    Stuart
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    March 01, 2010, 9:32AM

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