Some real estate markets seen falling as global frenzy fades - Reuters
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[June 02, 2022] By
Hari Kishan and Ross Finley
BENGALURU/LONDON (Reuters) - The global
property market frenzy that gathered pace during the pandemic as people
scrambled to buy more living space is likely over as interest rates
rise, and house price inflation is expected to drop off, Reuters surveys
of market experts showed.
Huge price rises of as much as 50% through the past few years may be
coming to an end, turning to modest falls in 2023 in some countries,
according to analysts covering nine key world property markets.
But they also say any declines won't make housing more affordable,
especially for first-time buyers, just as the basic cost of living soars
and mortgage rates go up - for the first time in many young people's
lifetimes.
"There is definitely a slowdown. So the pace of growth is slowing pretty
much everywhere ... (and) it is likely that a number of markets will see
price falls," said Liam Bailey, global head of research at Knight Frank.
"The question really is whether there is a risk of a kind of crash
scenario in certain markets."
For now, most real estate specialists aren't forecasting even a 10%
correction in house prices, instead sticking to the view that housing
inflation will slow substantially, in most cases to less than the rate
consumer prices are currently rising.
With wages unlikely to match any of these inflation trends any time
soon, agreement is exceptionally strong among analysts about the hit to
basic affordability in the next few years from record high house prices
and higher interest rates.
A more than two-thirds majority of analysts, or 83 of 119, who answered
an additional question said affordability for first-time buyers would
either worsen or worsen significantly over the next two years. The
remaining 36 said it would improve.
Even in property markets like India and Dubai - which avoided the panic
buying and high double-digit annual price appreciation seen during the
worst of the pandemic in markets like the United States, Canada and
Australia - analysts still agree affordability will worsen.
Graphic: Reuters Polls- Global housing market -
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gfx/polling/klpykolwnpg/Reuters%20Polls-%20Global%20housing%20market.png
INFLATION CHALLENGES
Part of that has to do with the cost of building new homes, which almost
universally are not being constructed fast enough to keep up with
demand.
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Carpenters work on building new townhomes that are still under
construction while building material supplies are in high demand in
Tampa, Florida, U.S., May 5, 2021. REUTERS/Octavio Jones
Soaring costs from supply chain disruptions facing all businesses around the
world are set to be passed on to first-time buyers, in much the same way as
consumers are paying more for everything they buy.
"The same inflation challenges ... specifically in the construction market, and
supply chain woes, which continue to plague ... developers and house builders
... are not being mitigated to any extent," said Adam Challis, executive
director of research and strategy for EMEA at JLL.
"In fact over the short term, it's very much likely to get worse as people have
returned to the cities ... and becoming much more excited about their urban
living choices."
Indeed, while analysts are generally reluctant to predict the thinking behind
consumer behaviour, it was the urge for people to move while struck by COVID-19
lockdowns that got them bidding for property. Very few expected that to happen.
Looking forward there seems little reason to predict existing homeowners, flush
with home equity from soaring prices, will be much more restrained acting on a
desire to return to city life.
That leaves first-time buyers, who have been in a difficult situation coming up
with a deposit for a property for the better part of a generation, in a worse
situation every year that goes by. That may hold even if prices fall.
"Your purchase price may be reduced ... but actually the cost of servicing a
loan may not actually decline along with that price," added Knight Frank's
Bailey.
Swathes of people in most countries, particularly the young, have resigned
themselves to renting over owning. But the shortage of homes has also driven up
rents everywhere.
Asked what would happen to affordability in the home rental market over the next
two years, more than 80% of analysts, or 82 of 99, said it would worsen. The
rest said it would improve.
(For other stories from the Reuters quarterly housing market polls:)
(Reporting by Hari Kishan; Additional reporting and polling by Jonathan Cable,
Shrutee Sarkar, Indradip Ghosh, Prerana Bhat, Vijayalakshmi Srinivasan, Milounee
Purohit, Vivek Mishra, Arsh Mogre, Anant Chandak, Md. Manzer Hussain and
Susobhan Sarkar; Editing by David Holmes)
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