Do rates need to rise before house prices slow?
Housing price growth will continue to slow even as interest rates stay at record lows, say economists.
Housing price growth will continue to slow even as interest rates stay at record lows, say economists.
There's no buyer for the business and little money for unsecured creditors, liquidators are likely to say at meetings on Thursday.
Median house prices in Melbourne and Sydney rose to new highs in the September quarter on low interest rates, migration and strong local economies.
Sydney clearance rate hits a record for the year of 85.6 per cent, up from 81.4 per cent last week.
It's no disaster, but lower crane counts in Melbourne and Brisbane suggest developers are holding off new projects.
State government are scared to replace stamp duty with and ACT-style land tax despite duties being volatile and penalising the young and mobile.
Insurer's annual report strengthens the notion that unit completions will push prices lower, at the same time as investors pull back.
Muted wage growth will constrain rental growth despite the tight rental market in most capitals.
Canberra house prices rose 2.4 per cent for the month beating Melbourne at 2.3 per cent and Sydney at 0.8 per cent.
A record year for Australia's volume home builders raises concerns that the country's largest-ever housing construction cycle has peaked.
House prices rose just 4.1 percent in the year to June, their slowest pace in more than three years, official figures show.
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