Pockets Of Sydney Where You Won’t Overpay
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Pockets Of Sydney Where You Won’t Overpay

Inner-city areas haven’t shared in the city’s booming price growth.

By Kirsten Craze
Mon, Dec 6, 2021 11:14amGrey Clock 5 min

While prices across greater Sydney soared by nearly 27% to Nov. 1 on average, according to PropTrack, several luxury suburbs have had a fraction of that growth—or even price declines, particularly for apartments.

Cameron Kusher, director of economic research at PropTrack, explained how some highly desirable postcodes have outperformed their neighbours.

“At a suburb level, price growth can sometimes seem to not make sense. Prices in a particular suburb may have boomed over a year, while a neighbouring suburb with similar attributes and properties may have seen very little price growth, or even falls,” Mr. Kushner said.

“We measure median prices based on what sells, so compositional changes in the properties that have transacted can play a role in whether price growth is strong or not so strong,” he added. Such compositional changes could mean smaller or larger homes, more or less acreage or whether prices are skewed by a major outlier transaction.

Slowest Moving House Markets

PropTrack calculated the lowest-growth Sydney suburb for luxury houses (with a median above $2 million) to be in Waverley, a small neighbourhood bordering famous Bondi Beach. It only experienced a 0.19% rise during the year to reach a median of just under $3 million. In Artarmon, about five miles north of the Harbour Bridge, the median luxury-home price increased by just 2.75% to $3.08 million. The exclusive neighborhood of Longueville, a leafy waterfront location also north of the harbour, saw values rise 5.24% to a median of $4.53 million.

While the common thread among suburbs with the strongest house-price growth had been their proximity to water, or exceptional water views, the slower performers were more diverse, Mr. Kushner said.

“The lower-growth areas are a bit more varied; some are waterfront while some aren’t. In the coastal areas, you may find more waterfront homes were sold a year ago, whereas this year it’s properties further away from water (and therefore cheaper) that are selling,” he said.

Apartment Markets With Room to Grow

As with most major global cities, Sydney’s apartment market took a price hit at the height of the pandemic as homeowners, renters and investors stepped away from high-density living.

The PropTrack data highlighting the lowest annual changes in the luxury-apartment market (with a median above $1 million) showed that Northbridge on Sydney’s Lower North Shore experienced a 14.17% price decline to $1.21 million, highly desirable Rose Bay in the exclusive Eastern Suburbs saw a 9% drop in luxury condos to a median of $1.38 million; and the central business district had a 2.78% decrease to A$1.05 million.

“For units, overall price growth in Sydney has lagged behind the growth seen for houses,” Mr. Kusher said, adding that areas with low price growth typically had an abundance of condo inventory.

“Many of them are also inner city, which is likely to be a contributing factor,” he continued. “The suburbs with the strongest growth are typically waterfront and have a lower overall supply of units, which are generally lower density than those found in the inner city. This is likely a major factor driving demand and price growth in these markets.”

Why Some Markets Lagged Behind—Until Now

Reece Coleman, head buyer’s broker at Maker Advisory, said the slower performing Sydney markets had been in a slumber due to the pandemic but looked set to wake up.

“For two years, Australia had some of the toughest border controls in the world,” he said.

“Between 40% to 60% of buyers of our luxury developments around the city, particularly near the harbour, are foreign buyers. Without them buying, prices have been affected,” he said.

That means that even within Sydney’s overheated housing market, there may be a moment of opportunity now for luxury-condo buyers in inner-city areas before international travel picks up again.

Mr. Coleman added that Sydney’s North Shore markets were missing two clear buyer types.

“Traditionally there are a significant number of overseas residents moving here to educate their children at the exclusive schools up in North Shore such as Roseville College, Ravenswood and Knox Grammar. While the borders were closed the families haven’t come,” he said, adding that the North Shore housing market is also fueled by people relocating for work.

“It’s the home of the middle-class executive; the CFOs, CMOs and COOs. But they haven’t been relocating in the last two years either. Expats have been coming back, but we’re not getting those executives transferring from the U.S. or from Europe,” he said.

“So our property market has definitely been affected by our tough border stance.”

Now Australia has reopened borders for some international travel, including citizens and permanent residents, Mr. Coleman said it is only a matter of time before the “sleeper” markets awaken.

“We think January is going to be busy with families returning to Sydney, which will drive up these suburbs. We’re already seeing more inquiries from Hong Kong and Malaysia, from people looking to locate and get their children in local schools,” he said. The relocation for many expat and foreign buyers is carefully timed to fit in with Sydney’s school year which begins in late January.

A Return to Sydney’s Inner City

Adrian Wilson, director of inner Sydney agency Ayre Real Estate, said the inner city was about to go through a renaissance.

“There absolutely was a trend for a while where global cities were far less buoyant than they normally were. But I’m standing in my city office looking out the window and there are people everywhere, which is great,” he said.

“There’s definitely good value for buyers or investors who are willing to consider stock that isn’t necessarily in favour at the moment because of lower rental yields. Buyers with a medium- or long-term view could find some great opportunities around $1 million to $1.5 million in that Central to City South location, because that part of the market hasn’t performed as strongly as others,” Mr Wilson said.

He added that micro markets which experienced “marginally negative” price movement were those with a large investor ownership prior to the pandemic.

“The level of investor interest obviously dissipated during Covid. In some cases city rents fell by as much as 30% immediately after the first wave. But rents are now starting to stabilize, and many of those reductions have crept back up toward where they were before,” he said.

The only way is up for savvy buyers, according to Mr. Coleman, who is now buying several “pied-a-terre” apartments in Sydney for clients that fled the city during the pandemic.

“Sydney’s growth isn’t over. It’s an amazing time to buy in the inner-city areas, they represent amazing value,” Mr. Coleman said. “Sydneysiders migrated out during Covid, but now those areas are coming back to life. We’re literally days away from foreign visitors and international students returning. If the rents go up, then prices will go up.”

 

Reprinted by permission of Mansion Global. Copyright 2021 Dow Jones & Company. Inc. All Rights Reserved Worldwide. Original date of publication: December 3, 2021.



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Savvy high net worth players from Australia and Asia are getting on board as the residential landscape shifts

By Bronwyn Allen
Fri, May 3, 2024 3 min

Build-to-rent (BTR) residential property has emerged as one of the key sectors of interest among institutional and private high-net-worth investors across the Asia-Pacific region, according to a new report from CBRE. In a survey of 500 investors, BTR recorded the strongest uptick in interest, particularly among investors targeting value-added strategies to achieve double-digit returns.

CBRE said the residential investment sector is set to attract more capital this year, with investors in Japan, Australia and mainland China the primary markets of focus for BTR development. BTR is different from regular apartment developments because the developer or investorowner retains the entire building for long-term rental income. Knight Frank forecasts that by 2030, about 55,000 dedicated BTR apartments will have been completed in Australia.

Knight Frank says BTR is a proven model in overseas markets and Australia is now following suit.

Investors are gravitating toward the residential sector because of the perception that it offers the ability to adjust rental income streams more quickly than other sectors in response to high inflation,” Knight Frank explained in a BTR report published in September 2023.

The report shows Melbourne has the most BTR apartments under construction, followed by Sydney. Most of them are one and two-bedroom apartments. The BTR sector is also growing in Canberra and Perth where land costs less and apartment rental yields are among the highest in the country at 5.1 percent and 6.1 percent, respectively, according to the latest CoreLogic data.

In BTR developments, there is typically a strong lifestyle emphasis to encourage renters to stay as long as possible. Developments often have proactive maintenance programs, concierges, add-on cleaning services for tenants, and amenities such as a gym, pool, yoga room, cinema, communal working spaces and outdoor barbecue and dining areas.

Some blocks allow tenants to switch apartments as their space needs change, many are pet-friendly and some even run social events for residents. However, such amenities and services can result in BTR properties being expensive to rent. Some developers and investors have been given subsidies to reserve a portion of BTR apartments as ‘affordable homes’ for local essential services workers.

Ray White chief economist Nerida Conisbee says Australian BTR is a long way behind the United States, where five percent of the country’s rental supply is owned by large companies. She says BTR is Australia’s “best betto raise rental supply amid today’s chronic shortage that has seen vacancy rates drop below 1% nationwide and rents skyrocket 40% over the past four years.

Nerida Conisbee says the BTR market is Australia’s ‘best bet’ for addressing the housing crisis.

Ms Conisbee says 84 percent of Australian rental homes are owned by private landlords, typically mum and dad investors, and nine percent are owned by governments. With Australia currently in the midst of a rental crisis, the question of who provides rental properties needs to be considered,” Ms Conisbee said. We have relied heavily on private landlords for almost all our rental properties but we may not be able to so readily in the future.” She points out that large companies can access and manage debt more easily than private landlords when interest rates are high.

The CBRE report shows that Asia-Pacific investors are also interested in other types of residential properties. These include student accommodation, particularly in high migration markets like Australia, and retirement communities in markets with ageing populations, such as Japan and Korea. Most Asia Pacific investors said they intended to increase or keep their real estate allocations the same this year, with more than 50 percent of Australian respondents intending to invest more.

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

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

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