How Can Companies Push Back on China? Be Like Australia.
Kanebridge News
    HOUSE MEDIAN ASKING PRICES AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $1,603,134 (+0.55%)       elbourne $989,193 (-0.36%)       Brisbane $963,516 (+0.83%)       Adelaide $873,972 (+1.09%)       Perth $833,820 (+0.12%)       Hobart $754,479 (+3.18%)       Darwin $668,319 (-0.54%)       Canberra $993,398 (-1.72%)       National $1,033,710 (+0.29%)                UNIT MEDIAN ASKING PRICES AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $748,302 (+0.18%)       Melbourne $497,833 (-0.44%)       Brisbane $540,964 (-1.56%)       Adelaide $441,967 (-0.38%)       Perth $442,262 (+1.33%)       Hobart $525,313 (+0.38%)       Darwin $347,105 (-0.72%)       Canberra $496,490 (+0.93%)       National $528,262 (-0.02%)                HOUSES FOR SALE AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 10,189 (-104)       Melbourne 14,713 (+210)       Brisbane 7,971 (+283)       Adelaide 2,420 (+58)       Perth 6,383 (+298)       Hobart 1,336 (+6)       Darwin 228 (-12)       Canberra 1,029 (+8)       National 44,269 (+747)                UNITS FOR SALE AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 8,795 (-1)       Melbourne 8,207 (+293)       Brisbane 1,636 (+1)       Adelaide 421 (-4)       Perth 1,664 (+15)       Hobart 204 (-1)       Darwin 404 (-2)       Canberra 988 (+12)       National 22,319 (+313)                HOUSE MEDIAN ASKING RENTS AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $800 (+$5)       Melbourne $600 ($0)       Brisbane $640 (+$10)       Adelaide $600 ($0)       Perth $660 ($0)       Hobart $550 ($0)       Darwin $700 ($0)       Canberra $690 ($0)       National $663 (+$2)                UNIT MEDIAN ASKING RENTS AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $750 ($0)       Melbourne $590 (+$10)       Brisbane $630 ($0)       Adelaide $490 (+$10)       Perth $600 ($0)       Hobart $475 (+$23)       Darwin $550 ($0)       Canberra $570 (+$5)       National $593 (+$4)                HOUSES FOR RENT AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 5,364 (+80)       Melbourne 5,428 (+4)       Brisbane 4,002 (+12)       Adelaide 1,329 (+16)       Perth 2,113 (+91)       Hobart 398 (0)       Darwin 99 (-5)       Canberra 574 (+39)       National 19,307 (+237)                UNITS FOR RENT AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 7,687 (+257)       Melbourne 4,793 (+88)       Brisbane 2,098 (+33)       Adelaide 354 (-11)       Perth 650 (+5)       Hobart 135 (-1)       Darwin 176 (-9)       Canberra 569 (+14)       National 16,462 (+376)                HOUSE ANNUAL GROSS YIELDS AND TREND       Sydney 2.59% (↑)      Melbourne 3.15% (↑)      Brisbane 3.45% (↑)        Adelaide 3.57% (↓)       Perth 4.12% (↓)       Hobart 3.79% (↓)     Darwin 5.45% (↑)      Canberra 3.61% (↑)      National 3.33% (↑)             UNIT ANNUAL GROSS YIELDS AND TREND         Sydney 5.21% (↓)     Melbourne 6.16% (↑)      Brisbane 6.06% (↑)      Adelaide 5.77% (↑)        Perth 7.05% (↓)     Hobart 4.70% (↑)      Darwin 8.24% (↑)        Canberra 5.97% (↓)     National 5.84% (↑)             HOUSE RENTAL VACANCY RATES AND TREND       Sydney 0.8% (↑)      Melbourne 0.7% (↑)      Brisbane 0.7% (↑)      Adelaide 0.4% (↑)      Perth 0.4% (↑)      Hobart 0.9% (↑)      Darwin 0.8% (↑)      Canberra 1.0% (↑)      National 0.7% (↑)             UNIT RENTAL VACANCY RATES AND TREND       Sydney 0.9% (↑)      Melbourne 1.1% (↑)      Brisbane 1.0% (↑)      Adelaide 0.5% (↑)      Perth 0.5% (↑)        Hobart 1.4% (↓)     Darwin 1.7% (↑)      Canberra 1.4% (↑)      National 1.1% (↑)             AVERAGE DAYS TO SELL HOUSES AND TREND       Sydney 29.7 (↑)      Melbourne 30.9 (↑)      Brisbane 31.2 (↑)      Adelaide 25.1 (↑)      Perth 34.4 (↑)      Hobart 35.8 (↑)      Darwin 35.9 (↑)      Canberra 30.4 (↑)      National 31.7 (↑)             AVERAGE DAYS TO SELL UNITS AND TREND       Sydney 30.0 (↑)      Melbourne 30.5 (↑)      Brisbane 28.8 (↑)        Adelaide 25.2 (↓)       Perth 38.3 (↓)       Hobart 27.8 (↓)     Darwin 45.8 (↑)      Canberra 38.1 (↑)      National 33.1 (↑)            
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How Can Companies Push Back on China? Be Like Australia.

By Isaac Stone Fish
Thu, Dec 3, 2020 1:39amGrey Clock 3 min

Drinking together has always been a way to show solidarity. And that’s what Australian allies are doing, in response to Beijing’s newest trade sanctions on the country’s wine industry. Taiwanese legislators posted photographs of themselves with bottles of Australian wine, while a Swedish politician urged people to stand up to Beijing by “drinking a bottle or two.” Even the U.S. National Security Council joined in with an unusually punchy tweet. The bandwagoning may be awkward at times, but it contains an important lesson: The best way to push back against Beijing’s coercion is through a unified response.

For more than six months, Beijing has been waging a trade war against Australia. The latest salvo—up to 212% tariffs on Australian wine, announced on Nov. 27—threatens to decimate the country’s roughly $3 billion wine industry, and adds to a crowded list of tariffed items. The total amount targeted is now roughly $20 billion. Beijing has blamed Australia for a “series of wrong moves,” and announced 14 political disputes it expects Canberra to rectify in order to improve the relationship.

This is not a new tactic for Beijing. Since the 1990s, Beijing has made public examples of foreign institutions, people, and countries, and used that to scare others into acquiescence. After the Houston Rockets’ then general manager Daryl Morey tweeted about Hong Kong in October 2019, for example, Beijing froze the NBA out of China for a year, leading to hundreds of millions of dollars of lost revenue for the organisation. Reached for comment, an NBA spokesperson forwarded NBA Commissioner Adam Silver’s recent comments, where he said that the NBA’s response to the China scandal was, “We support freedom of expression.”

The NBA incident wasn’t the first. After the independent Nobel committee’s 2010 decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize to the Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, Beijing drastically curtailed Norway’s salmon exports to China. Companies like Marriott and the South Korean conglomerate Lotte have been targeted, too.

The strategy Beijing is using against Australia—coordinated complaints, economic punishment for political crimes, and an insistence that the other party is solely at fault—is remarkably similar to what Beijing did to the NBA. What’s new is Australia’s response.

The crucial difference lies in Australia’s smart insistence in not facing China alone. Since the beginning of its trade war, Canberra has strengthened old alliances and built new ones. It has agreed to develop a supply chain resilience program with Japan and India, signed a free trade deal with Indonesia, and benefitted from political support of countries like France, New Zealand, and especially the United States. Australia has urged its allies to understand that the more it yields to an attack by Beijing, the worse it is for its partners. This is especially true with the countries in the so-called Five Eyes intelligence sharing partnership, whose other members are Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and the United States.

The other major difference is Canberra’s willingness to publicly criticise Beijing. The NBA’s responses were almost uniformly milquetoast, including from normally outspoken stars, like LeBron James, who called Morey “misinformed.” Compare that to criticism of Beijing across the Australian political spectrum: Prime Minister Scott Morrison has posted criticisms on Chinese social media, while Penny Wong, the leader of the opposition in the senate, called one of Beijing’s recent actions “gratuitous” and “inflammatory.”

Corporations can learn from Australia. When faced with Beijing’s ire, businesses need to partner more closely with their home governments and their global competitors. Organisations like the U.S.-China Business Council already serve as platforms for companies to coordinate and share grievances. But they do so mostly privately, and with an overwhelming desire to maintain positive relationships with Beijing. They argue that staying quiet in public helps companies maintain leverage and keep their China presence. “China can’t make good on its promises to further open its economy if there is no longer anyone there—or that could be there—to open to,” a spokesperson for the council said.

Chambers of commerce need to understand that publicly and privately pushing back against Beijing with American and other home government support when one of their members is targeted is better in the long run for all member companies. In certain cases, Congress should consider an antitrust waiver for firms that are collaborating to challenge Beijing.

Will publicly and multilaterally pushing back against Beijing help Canberra succeed in reducing tensions without showing weakness? It’s difficult to say—in large part because Beijing’s responses to these situations are uneven. Sometimes Beijing holds the grudge for years, and sometimes it calms down in weeks, or even days. The capriciousness of the response is a sign of strength, not weakness—it pushes the adversary to overcompensate, to seek to right the relationship. But standing strong and not yielding is Australia’s best hope for a healthy future relationship with both China and the United States. And Australia’s allies are stepping up. In late November, the Trump administration announced plans to work with Australia to counter Beijing’s economic hostage-taking. “The West needs to create a system of absorbing collectively the economic punishment from China’s coercive diplomacy and offset the cost,” a senior administration official told the Wall Street Journal.

Corporations targeted by Beijing can effectively engage their allies, both in governments, and in the business world, but most don’t. As tensions between the United States and China continue to worsen, it’s imperative that they build support from their home governments—and that they speak out when Beijing targets them.



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How much income is required to service a mortgage? It depends on where you live

New research suggests spending 40 percent of household income on loan repayments is the new normal

By Bronwyn Allen
Thu, Apr 25, 2024 3 min

Requiring more than 30 percent of household income to service a home loan has long been considered the benchmark for ‘housing stress’. Yet research shows it is becoming the new normal. The 2024 ANZ CoreLogic Housing Affordability Report reveals home loans on only 17 percent of homes are ‘serviceable’ if serviceability is limited to 30 percent of the median national household income.

Based on 40 percent of household income, just 37 percent of properties would be serviceable on a mortgage covering 80 percent of the purchase price. ANZ CoreLogic suggest 40 may be the new 30 when it comes to home loan serviceability. “Looking ahead, there is little prospect for the mortgage serviceability indicator to move back into the 30 percent range any time soon,” says the report.

“This is because the cash rate is not expected to be cut until late 2024, and home values have continued to rise, even amid relatively high interest rate settings.” ANZ CoreLogic estimate that home loan rates would have to fall to about 4.7 percent to bring serviceability under 40 percent.

CoreLogic has broken down the actual household income required to service a home loan on a 6.27 percent interest rate for an 80 percent loan based on current median house and unit values in each capital city. As expected, affordability is worst in the most expensive property market, Sydney.

Sydney

Sydney’s median house price is $1,414,229 and the median unit price is $839,344.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $211,456 to afford a home loan for a house and $125,499 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $120,554.

Melbourne

Melbourne’s median house price is $935,049 and the median apartment price is $612,906.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $139,809 to afford a home loan for a house and $91,642 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $110,324.

Brisbane

Brisbane’s median house price is $909,988 and the median unit price is $587,793.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $136,062 to afford a home loan for a house and $87,887 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $107,243.

Adelaide

Adelaide’s median house price is $785,971 and the median apartment price is $504,799.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $117,519 to afford a home loan for a house and $75,478 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $89,806.

Perth

Perth’s median house price is $735,276 and the median unit price is $495,360.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $109,939 to afford a home loan for a house and $74,066 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $108,057.

Hobart

Hobart’s median house price is $692,951 and the median apartment price is $522,258.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $103,610 to afford a home loan for a house and $78,088 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $89,515.

Darwin

Darwin’s median house price is $573,498 and the median unit price is $367,716.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $85,750 to afford a home loan for a house and $54,981 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $126,193.

Canberra

Canberra’s median house price is $964,136 and the median apartment price is $585,057.

Based on 40 percent serviceability, households need a total income of $144,158 to afford a home loan for a house and $87,478 for a unit. The city’s actual median household income is $137,760.

 

MOST POPULAR
11 ACRES ROAD, KELLYVILLE, NSW

This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan

35 North Street Windsor

Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.

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