The value of our Aussie homes increased in the first quarter of the year, bucking a global trend downwards believe it or not!
House and flat prices in Australia increased in value by 1.6% in the first three months of the year, helped by a scarcity of supply, lower interest rates and incentives to first-home buyers.
The slight recovery in Australia “has primarily been driven by the 40% fall in home loan rates down to 5.7%, which are now at their lowest since July 1968!”
March’s three-month gain follows a 0.1% rise in the three months to February in the RP Data-Rismark’s national dwelling value index, and a 3% fall in the value of “cap” city homes in 2008.
The strength of Australian housing prices is a world away – well so far - from the 2.7% drop in British home prices over the first quarter, capping a year to March a whopping 17.5% plunge!
US housing didn’t fare too much better, with prices in the top 20 cities sinking 1.9% in February, which brought the 12-month fall to 18.6%, according to the most recent S&P/Case-Shiller index, a widely followed measure.
RP Data-Rismark said the first-home buyer’s grant, ending on June 30, has acted like a catalyst for new home buying in Australia, but lower interest rates are sustaining the market’s growth.