Archive for July 21st, 2008

A-Grade offer for Unipark premise

Monday, July 21st, 2008

A modern office building at CGA Bryson’s Unipark office development at
Monash in Melbourne’s outer east is being offered for sale via an EOI.

Watpac awarded state government project

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Construction firm Watpac has been appointed as the managing contractor
for the State Government’s $361 million Knowledge Based Research and
Business Project.

Construction boosts Newcastle market

Monday, July 21st, 2008

A new MarketView research report by CB Richard Ellis has shown that the
Newcastle region is emerging as competitive commercial market for the
office, industrial and retail sectors.

Scott Street pre-sales hop ahead

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Despite the current economic conditions, developer Waterford Properties
has achieved $30 million in pre-sales on its Scott Street project at
Kangaroo Point, Queensland.

Scope for development at Bundoora

Monday, July 21st, 2008

A development site in Bundoora, Victoria, holding a planning permit and
further potential for an intensive development, is being offered for
sale on an Expressions of Interest basis.

Housing demand won’t push prices up

Monday, July 21st, 2008

A lot of agents and others have suggested that a rising population means a demand for more housing, and that this automatically means that property prices will continue to go up. However, independent economist Dr Ed Shann disagrees, saying that house prices in Australia have fallen in the past, and that the current high house prices combined with high interest rates changes the game:

“… underlying demand is a theoretical concept using long-run trends in population growth and household formation. In practice, high house prices mean kids stay home longer, rather than buy new housing and students rent houses together rather than separately.

Actual demand for new houses is currently below underlying demand.”
- Ed Shann, “Debunking housing myths”

He goes on to suggest that financial pressures can force investors and holiday house owners to place their houses on the market, and that house prices will need to fall until they are closer to the value of other assets. I have to agree, as the general property market seems to have gone about as high as it can go based on current median wages, and rents are yet to catch up to property prices so the demand for investment properties will not be as high as it was earlier this decade.