Auckland in turmoil?
New figures suggest that the
Barfoot & Thompson - the city's biggest real estate agency group - has reported sales fell to 453 in April, down 50 per cent from April a year ago and down 28 per cent from 632 sales in March. The number of new listings in the month was almost quadruple the number of houses that actually sold in April.
Barfoot & Thompson's are the first figures to emerge from the housing market for April and are closely watched by financial market observers because they are an early indication of nationwide figures from the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand due at the end of this week. Barfoot & Thompson generated 39 per cent of
The average sale price reported by the firm in April fell to NZ$520,380 from NZ$522,331 the previous month and is now down 7 per cent from its
Evidence of forced selling?
Peter Thompson, Managing Director of Barfoot & Thompson commented: “A higher proportion of sales were in the bracket below NZ$500,000, but this had not dragged the average price down much. Logically it could be expected that this would reduce the average price - but that wasn't the case,"
“Property prices continued to hold despite low turnover and that there is no evidence of forced selling, despite reports to the contrary in the media. This suggests two things. That new buyers entered the market encouraged by the wide range of stock available and that price discounting is nowhere near as prevalent as media reports would have us believe.
The number of houses listed as available for sale rose to 7,843 at the end of April from 7,379 at the end of March and was 76 per cent higher than a year ago. Barfoot & Thompson said 1,590 new listings were made in April, down from 2,049 in February, suggesting fewer new houses were being listed.