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New home sales dip down in Australia, latest data shows

Seasonally adjust new home sales in Australia were down marginally by 0.4% in July but the market overall is in strong shape, the latest report from the Housing Industry Association shows. This is because overall new home sales are at historically high levels, according to HIA chief economist Harley Dale. ‘It appears that the cyclical peak for total new home sales occurred in April, but the subsequent downward trend is very mild,’ he said. But he explained that key leading indicators of home building, including HIA new home sales, suggest little prospect for further growth in new home construction in the 2015/2016 financial year. ‘However, following three consecutive years of strong growth which has propped up the domestic economy considerably, both HIA new home sales and ABS building Approvals signal another healthy year for new home construction,’ he added. Indeed, the data shows that detached house sales increased by 0.7% in July this year but the annual peak for detached house sales has passed. Over the three months to July this year detached house sales fell by 2.8% and are 3.4% lower when compared to the three months to July 2014. Multi-unit sales peaked in May this year and fell by 4.2% in July following a decline of 2.9% in June. Over the three months to July this year multi-unit sales increased by 8.3% but it was the strength of the May result that drove the quarterly outcome. A breakdown of the latest data shows that in the month of July 2015 detached house sales increased by 4.2% in New South Wales but fell by 2.3% in Victoria and by 4.9% per cent in Western Australia. Sales were close to flat for the month in Queensland with a marginal fall of 0.6% and South Australia they were down by just 0.2%. Continue reading

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Research paints a generally harmonious tenant/landlord relationship

Tenants in the UK believe that landlords are fair and helpful but there’s room for improvement on safety issues according to new research. Overall a harmonious, friendly and respectful relationship exists between landlords and tenants, with 59% of people surveyed saying they believe they pay a fair price in rent and 48% saying they have a good or very good relationship with their landlord. The research from AXA Business Insurance also shows that only 6% of tenants feel their relationship with their landlord is bad or very bad, and good will and acts of kindness are common between property owners and the people who rent from them. But it also highlights significant room for improvement when it comes to safety and security. Some 43% of landlords have failed to arrange the legally required annual gas safety check, 54% have neglected to install a fire alarm, 68% have not organised an annual electrical safety inspection, and 71% have not organised a carbon monoxide alarm. In addition, 74% of landlords have failed to put locks on all external windows and doors and 78% of landlords have not arranged a door chain or spyhole to keep their tenants secure. Despite these important oversights, people up and down the country generally paint a positive portrait of the person who owns their rented home. Some 30% of tenants most commonly describe their landlords, 23% as helpful, 20% as responsible, 19% as trustworthy and 15% as caring. In the small number of cases where the relationship is more difficult, some 2% of tenants say their landlord is creepy, 3% think they’re seedy and 3% describe them as dishonest. Some 28% of tenants say their landlord has done something ‘nice’ for them and 20% say they have done something ‘nice’ for their landlord in return. Many swap cards on special occasions, while the most common acts of kindness on the landlord’s side include gift giving, forgiving a late payment in difficult times and offering help above and beyond what might be reasonably expected in a tenant’s agreement. In return, tenants are happy to arrange small decorating or DIY jobs and even do a bit of home baking when they expect a landlord visit. And while 35% of tenants admit they’d take more care of a home they owned themselves, most make a special effort to look after the property and aim to have it clean and tidy before the landlord pops round. Cleaning floors and bathrooms, making beds, spraying air-freshener or lighting candles and taking the bins out in advance of a visit are common. Yet even those people who enjoy a positive rental experience recognise that not everyone is as lucky, and 85% agree that the government should do more to protect people who rent from private landlords. ‘There’s clearly a lot of good will between landlords and their tenants and our research shows that rental home horror stories and negative stereotypes… Continue reading

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UK mortgage activity improved in second quarter of 2015, CML data shows

The London property market saw increased mortgage lending in the second quarter of 2015 but levels were still down compared to the same quarter last year. The latest quarterly data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders shows that home owner house purchase activity in Greater London came out of the traditional seasonal dip to show growth in the second quarter by volume and value. First time buyer activity saw similar trends with an increase in levels on the first quarter of the year, but this sector was also down on the same quarter last year. Unlike house purchase activity, remortgage lending had quarter on quarter and year on year growth in both volume and value. ‘As in the UK overall, the London market came out of the usual seasonal dip in the first few months of the year and saw increased activity but volumes are still on the same period last year,’ said Paul Smee, director general of the CML. ‘Remortgage activity has shown quarterly and year on year growth after a period of stagnation. Borrowers appear to be taking advantage of competitive mortgage rates, ahead of a potential future interest rate rise,’ he added. In Wales house purchase activity saw large quarter on quarter increases compared to the first quarter of the year, but a slight decline in volume of loans compared to the second quarter in 2014. First time buyers increased significantly from the first quarter, but decreased in amount borrowed and number of loans compared to the second quarter of 2014. Home movers went up in volume and value quarter on quarter, and while number of loans remained unchanged year on year the amount borrowed by home movers increased. The data also shows that remortgage activity increased compared to the first quarter and on the same quarter last year. ‘House purchase activity appears to have woken up in Wales after traditionally slower levels in the winter months,’ said Julie-Ann Haines, CML chair for Wales. ‘The uptick in remortgage is, in particular, striking as levels had remained relatively identical over the previous four quarters. With the current low rates of interest unlikely to continue, it seems that borrowers are now taking advantage of competitive mortgage rates before a rise,’ she added. Continue reading

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