Growth in housing market cooling off: RBA
Rapid growth in property prices may be beginning to ease, according to an analysis by the Reserve Bank of Australia.
In the minutes of their monthly board meeting, the RBA noted the established housing sector appears to be losing momentum.
You’re out of free articles for this month
To continue reading the rest of this article, please log in.
Create free account to get unlimited news articles and more!
“There had been signs of a tempering in conditions in the established housing market,” the minutes stated.
“Members observed that, looking through the monthly volatility, housing price inflation had slowed over recent months, auction clearance rates had fallen from the high levels seen late last year, and loan approvals had been little changed over the past six months.”
At the same time, investor activity in the property market remains at a 10-year high.
“Dwelling investment increased noticeably in the March quarter and, over the six months to March, was running at close to the fastest pace seen in around a decade,” the minutes stated.
Residential construction activity has eased in recent times but remains elevated.
The Reserve Bank predicted this sector would continue to surge ahead.
“Residential building approvals had declined somewhat in recent months, but they remained at relatively high levels and both work yet to be done and loan approvals for new dwellings pointed to further strong growth in dwelling investment in coming quarters,” the minutes stated.