www.zerohedge.com
It's not just stocks: the global housing market is in for a rough
patch, which has turned ugly for many homeowners and investors from
Vancouver to London, with markets in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Australia
already showing increased signs of softening.
Macro factors have triggered a global economic slowdown that is unraveling luxury marketplaces worldwide, according to Bloomberg.
As a result, a turning point has been reached, with home prices
globally now under pressure, and rising mortgage rates leading to
depressed consumer optimism, while also triggering a housing
affordability crisis, S&P Global Ratings said in a December report.
To make matters worse, a simultaneous drop in house prices globally
could lead to “financial and macroeconomic instability,” the IMF warned
in a report last April.
While each metropolis globally has its distinct characteristics of
what triggered its real estate slowdown, there are a few common
denominators at play: rising borrowing costs, quantitative tightening, a
crackdown on money laundering and increased government regulation,
emerging market capital outflows and volatile financial markets.
Bloomberg notes that there is also declining demand from Chinese buyers,
who were the most powerful force in many housing markets globally over
the course of this cycle.
One of the first dominos to fall has been in Hong Kong, home
values in the city have plummeted for 13 weeks straight since August,
the longest losing streak since the 2008 financial crash,
data from Centaline Property Agency show.
Homeowners and investors have
taken great caution due to a jump in borrowing costs, a looming vacancy
tax, and the trade war that has derailed economic growth in mainland
China.
“The change in attitude can be explained by a slowing mainland
economy,” said Henry Mok, JLL’s senior director of capital markets.
“Throw in a simmering trade war between China and the U.S.,
the government has taken actions to restrict capital outflows, which in
turn has increased difficulties for developers to invest overseas.”
Home prices in Singapore, which rank among the world's most expensive
places to live, logged the first decline in six quarters in the three
months ended December. Bloomberg said luxury experienced the worst
declines, with values in prime areas dropping 1.5%.
Most of the slowdown was caused by government policies to cool the
overinflated housing market. Cooling measures were implemented in July
included higher stamp duties and tougher loan-to-value rules. The
policies enacted by the government have halted the home-price recovery
that only lasted for five quarters, the shortest since data became
available.
“Landed home prices, being bigger ticket items, have taken a greater
beating as demand softened,” said Ong Teck Hui, a senior director of
research and consultancy at JLL.
The downturn in Sydney's housing market is expected to continue this
year as tighter lending standards and the worst plunge in values since
the late 1980s has spooked buyers. Average Sydney home values had
dropped 11.1% since their 2017 top, according to a recent CoreLogic Inc.
report -- surpassing the 9.6% peak to trough decline when Australia was
on the cusp of entering its last recession.
Nationwide, home values declined 4.8% last year, marking the weakest housing market conditions since the 2008 financial crash.
“Access to finance is likely to remain the most significant barrier
to an improvement in housing market conditions in 2019,” CoreLogic’s
head of research Tim Lawless said. Weak consumer sentiment toward the
property market is “likely to continue to dampen housing demand.”
Bloomberg notes that home prices in the country are still 60% higher
than in 2012, if prices plunge another 10% in 2019, well, it could spark
mass panic.
The Reserve Bank of Australia is terrified that an extended downturn
will crimp consumption and with the main opposition Labor party pledging
to curb tax perks for property investors if it wins an election
expected in May, economic optimism would further deteriorate. Treasurer
Josh Frydenberg on Thursday told the nation's top banks not to tighten
credit any more as the economic downturn is expected to get much worse.
But all eyes are on what is going on in arguably the most important
housing markets in the world - those of Shanghai and Beijing. A
government crackdown on leverage and overheating prices have damaged
sales and triggered a 5% tumble in home values from their top. Rules
on multiple home purchases, or how soon a property can be flipped once
it is acquired, are starting to be relaxed, and the giveaways by home
builders to lure buyers are starting to get absurd.
One developer in September was giving away new BMWs to new homebuyers
at its townhouses in Shanghai. Down-payments have been slashed, with
China Evergrande Group asking for 5% rather than the normal 30% deposit
required.
“It’s not a surprise to see Beijing and Shanghai residential prices
fall given the curbing policies currently on these two markets,” said
Henry Chin, head of research at CBRE Group Inc.
As a whole, Bloomberg's compilation of global housing data showing
the unraveling of many housing markets is a sobering reminder that a
synchronized global slowdown has started.
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