"Some factual lessons learnt from previous economic downturns." - Steve Tahere, Finance Broker, Bayside Home Loans
Just as it did with past crisis, the adverse economic impact from this coronavirus health crisis will begin its rebound with a real estate surge before anything else. Safe as houses!
Residential real estate is the one thing which is common to 25.5 million Australians. After all, shelter is an essential commodity.
While we all take one for the team to contain this god-awful nuisance of a germ, it is shelter that we are bunkering down in.
It’s incredibly frustrating to not be able to have a barbeque with family or friends. Weeks on end without being able to go to the gym. No dining at cafes or restaurants or to have a pot at the pub. It’s not even safe for sporting events to go ahead.
Let’s face it, we are all going a bit bat-shit crazy at the moment!
But housing is safe.
The 200,000 real estate professionals across Australia are doing a stellar job providing the essential service of buying, selling and renting shelter. With a few logistical tweaks, it’s business as usual for the shelter industry.
Understandably, curtailed human mobility will mean significantly less real estate activity. In fact, I fully expect these coming months will smash all-time record low transaction volumes.
But fewer buyers will be neutralised by fewer sellers. Let’s not forget that Australian real estate already had a significant shortage of properties listed for sale before this dreaded Covid germ tipped our communities upside down.
Indeed, for those with income security, it’s an incredibly exciting time to transact in real estate now. From first home buyers, to upgraders, downsizers and property investors, those who do will be the biggest beneficiaries in a couple of years from now. Here’s why!
For the moment though, real estate prices are largely on hold while everyone is (temporarily) confined to cocoons.
It’s a bit like what our Prime Minister said about the national economy: ‘… the pause button has been pressed for a period of time…’
Of course, that’s not how Negative Neville or Whinging Wendy will see it. As they suck on another lemon, they’ll spend the next year or more talking about recession, high unemployment rates, government debt and property market crashes. You see, to these folk, a crisis is a doomsayer premiership.
Twenty-nine years ago, real estate led the rebound out of Australia’s last recession. The unemployment rate hovered around 10 per cent during the 1991 recession year and the subsequent 2-years.
Over those 3-years ending 1993, 8 out of 8 capital cities produced property price growth (yes, growth) of between 2 percent (Melbourne) and 27 percent (Perth). Regional property markets were as strong, if not stronger, including Townsville (37 percent), Toowoomba (33 percent) and Wagga Wagga (22 percent).
It was a similar story 12-years ago with the global financial crisis – the biggest economic downturn in history.
Property prices again increased in 8 out of 8 capital cities over the 3-years ending 2010. Darwin (32 percent) and Melbourne (21 percent) were the best-performed capitals while Ballarat (19 percent), Bendigo and Launceston (both 18 percent) and Armidale (17 percent) were among many strong regional property markets.
Yes, of course this crisis is different!
No two crisis are ever the same. The wide-ranging conditions before the onset of a crisis, the cause of a crisis, and the arsenal used to respond to a crisis will always be different.
The many differences between this crisis and other crisis of the past are mostly different in a good way:
As winter becomes spring, and spring becomes summer, we will all come bursting out of our cocoons with a renewed sense of freedom.
We’ll be saying ‘How good is it to enjoy a feed and a drink with friends, to go the beach, and to play sport again.’
There will be an enormous release of pent-up demand for goods and services. For property, it’s likely to be akin to a flock of seagulls fighting over a chip!
In the coming months, as Australia gains confidence that we are getting on top of this nuisance germ, the attention of all levels of government will turn to policies to crank the economy back up.
Mark my words, the real estate sector will be right at the top of priorities – it always is!
Source: https://www.propertyology.com.au/why-property-price-growth-always-leads-crisis-recovery/
Pressley, S. (2020, April 8). Why property price growth always leads a crisis recovery. Retrieved from https://www.propertyology.com.au/why-property-price-growth-always-leads-crisis-recovery/