Australian Property Bubble Ready To Burst

Jan 21
2009

A drop in Australian house and property values is imminent, it is not an if but a when the bubble will burst.

Four years ago the OECD (The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) released a report revealing that: “AUSTRALIA had by far the most overvalued houses in the Western world, with prices 52 per cent higher than justified by rental values.” The report went on the say: “Australia was one of four countries where house prices were most out of line with fundamentals and that a correction of these inflated prices could generate an economic downturn, affecting growth, employment, government budgets and bank lending.”

So now in 2009 four years later we are in the middle of the biggest financial meltdown in the history of the world and our house prices have increased? I know Australia is a great place to live, but it just does not add up. Successive governments have subsidised the property bubble to an extent with first home owner grants and bonus’s, but that makes up a small part of the overall market. Why does our bubble continue to inflate, when will it burst and what will be the fallout for Australian residents and home owners? What will it mean for our major lenders and superannuation funds?

Consolidate your debts as soon as possible, get ready for a some rough property investment weather, but be ready to take advantage of the recovery if you can.

Link To This Post
1. Click inside the codebox
2. Right-Click then Copy
3. Paste the HTML code into your webpage
codebox
powered by Linkubaitor

Property Boom or Bust,but Profit Assured

Sep 14
2008

Australian Property, Boom or Bust on US crisis?

Could Australian property prices collapse and go bust as part of a domino effect from the US Sub Prime crisis and credit default swap dilemma?

Last week many popular media outlets reported that the US credit markets may be headed for the drain. Maybe it could happen, and maybe Australian property owners and mortgage holders would be hit with more mortgage stress. Well that was until the US government stepped in with a so called “conservatorship” of the two giant us domestic mortgage providers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in a bid to avert what many doomsayer’s prophecy as a global financial system meltdown. The US government as I understand it have taken over the running and financial backing of these two companies.

What a great move. In the past all I have ever seen is governments selling off public assets in a time of crisis. Literally, throwing billions of potential income to the private sector. Buying private assets when they are cheap? This surely is a move in the right direction. This purchase may give the government of the US the largest public ownership of housing outside the China and Russia. You see in the US, mortgage holders are not as personally liable for the mortgage debt as they are in Australia, they can simply just hand back the keys to the house and walk away, leaving the bank to worry about the mortgage and the house. People are dying to get to the USA to improve their lives, and they will want the American dream. Watch out China, this could be the catalyst for the USA economy and its people to resurrect the great boom nation and move it to a new higher plain of economic strength.

If sanity prevails and greed is good as the fictitious Gordon Gecko from the movie Wall Street extols, the worlds debt security markets should be back on track in no time. The US government and therefore tax payers may even make some profit from the recovery. Please be assured, someone will profit big.

Historical Australian Mortgage Interest Rates may indicate more than you think? Cast your mind back to when our Australian Mortgage Interest Rates were 18%. I am sure some people got rich in property, by making a few sacrifices? Recent financial media speculation centres around our Australian Mortgage Interest Rates moving down. I hope they are right. With the downward move I expect an improvement in the liquidity of Australian Property, but maybe not a price increase. The US credit situation will continue to dampen enthusiasm.

My advice? Start scouting for your next property. Some folks will get scared with all this media doom and gloom and sell up, in that case you could find some bargains in the Australian Property market very soon. Make an appointment with your mortgage broker or mortgage home loan coach and be prepared to move quickly before everybody gets on the property boom band wagon again.

Link To This Post
1. Click inside the codebox
2. Right-Click then Copy
3. Paste the HTML code into your webpage
codebox
powered by Linkubaitor