Aussie price growth?
The Australian residential property market reversed the downward trend
by recording average price growth of 0.3 per cent in October, after falling for
the past six months...
The median price growth recorded may be low, but it is the first two
consecutive months of appreciation since the housing downturn began, according
to research from RP Data and Rismark International.
"The doom and gloom merchants have misunderstood the fundamentals and the
diversity of the Australian residential property market by predicting that
Australia was headed for a market-wide implosion in 2008," according to RP
Data Head of Research Tim Lawless.
Australian property values had fallen just 0.8 per cent over the year to
October, compared with the share market's (S&P/ASX 200 index) 40.5 per cent
drop, Mr Lawless said.
"The Australian property market has moved through the bottom of its
cycle," he said yesterday, releasing RP Data-Rismark's latest residential
price index to the end of October.
But the company cautions not to expect a quick turnaround and forecast flat
housing prices in the first half of next year.
Other commentators are more pessimistic. AMP chief economist Shane Oliver
believes Australia's
house prices are overvalued and could fall 10-15 per cent next year.
Source: www.homesoverseas.co.uk