Monday, August 27, 2007

Excerpt from ANZ Press Release, dated 20 August 2007

The majority of regions are now shifting to a position of
excess supply. REINZ housing market data shows housing market
activity is moderating. Median house prices have fallen for the
second consecutive month, house sales continued their trend
lower, and days to sell ticked up slightly. The previous tight
market has been a consequence of both strong demand and tight
supply conditions. But interest rate hikes are likely to see
demand slow. The question is whether tight supply will continue
to support the market, or will the Reserve Bank get the
sustained slowing they desire. We monitor two simple gauges to
highlight supply-demand balance within the property market, and
across the regions.

• The ratio of consents (supply) to economic
growth within a region. If consents are
growing faster than demand growth within the
region, it is indicative of excess supply, and of
course the converse applies.
• The ratio of house sales to consents.
Another supply-demand balance measure, with
an up-tick in the ratio indicating excess
demand, and a fall below trend suggesting a
supply glut pending.
Across the regions, we note the following:
• Auckland remains the national hot-spot
although conditions have eased since last
quarter. The ratio of consents to GDP remains
below trend (too little supply), while the ratio of
sales to consents did fall, but remains indicative
of still strong demand.
• Our demand-supply indicators suggest roughly
balanced conditions in Northland, Waikato and
Canterbury.
• The majority of regions are now showing early
signs of a market that is set to move in the
favour of buyers. The ratio of consents to GDP
has been trending up in Gisborne, Taranaki,
Hawke’s Bay, Manawatu, Nelson/Malborough
and West Coast. Wellington also experienced a
sharp shift to excess supply conditions in the
quarter. In these same regions, the ratio of
house sales to consents has fallen below the
historical average.
Only the Auckland region is still clearly facing
significant excess demand conditions. The majority
of other regions look to be showing pending excess
supply conditions relative to demand. The tight
demand-supply balance that has been supportive of
the housing market for some time finally looks to
be turning. Ultimately, this suggests that house
price growth, which has already softened recently,
will continue to moderate over the year ahead.

Source: ANZ Market Focus

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
me a blank e-mail on the following address:
barfootandthompson@getresponse.com

Sunday, August 26, 2007

STATISTICS DO NOT LIE

They say cold hard statistics do not lie. Please study the table
below. It will give you some very interesting insight.

Location Average House Price May 2007 Price May 2004

Auckland North - Albany $640,000 $477,000
Auckland North - Birkenhead $552,250 $377,000
Auckland Central - Eastern Suburbs $761,500 $628,000
Auckland Central City $427,250 $350,000
Auckland Central - Mt Eden / Epsom $690,000 $502,000
Auckland West - Henderson Area $383,750 $274,000
Auckland South - Papatoetoe $334,500 $252,000

According to this data during the past 3 years the price increases where as follows:

Birkenhead - 46.4%
Henderson - 40.1%
Mt Eden/Epsom - 37.5%
Albany - 34.2%
Papatoetoe - 33%
Auckland City - 22%
Eastern Suburb -21.2%

What does this tell us? Categorizing properties into high capital growth areas and high cash flow areas can be some kind of a myth. You can get high capital gains in areas that are traditionally regarded as high cash flow areas. Just because your quantum of return is high does not necessarily mean that you have made a good return on your investment. The capital gain has to be studied in relationship to the purchase price. Birkenhead, Henderson and Papatoetoe definitely do not command the same respect as Mt Eden, Eastern Suburbs or Albany. But then statistics do not lie.

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
me a blank e-mail on the following address:
barfootandthompson@getresponse.com

Commercial Property versus Residential Property

“Fear melts when you take action towards a goal you really want.” -Robert G Allen

There are several reasons why owning commercial property is better then owning resident property. The reasons are clear for anyone who has ever worked as a landlord. Cranking tenants complaining about everything on earth in the middle of the night.

Most people invest in residential real estate because commercial real estate feels like unchartered waters and we are afraid. How exactly does a commercial landlord do, act, and say? Commercial property must work pretty well, after all Donald Trump started his emperor by being a commercial property 'landlord' and if it worked for him it can work for you.

Below are a few reasons why you might want to consider investing in commercial real estate instead of residential.

The first reason that commercial real estate has a higher rate of return then residential properties. Commercial property is space for businesses to sell their products and services. Their businesses depend on the number of visitors they receive each day in their store.

The monthly rent on a commercial property is based on a certain percentage of the profit the company makes each month. As the businesses your rent to, make more money so do you. When a business comes and want to rent from you they do so because they know you have a good location.

These businesses know the value of being centrally located and they are willing to pay to be in the right place. Location is less important for residential properties and it takes time to fill up your real estate.

Most commercial renters will fix problems and minor repairs on their own with out calling the landlord. This is because they realize that problems interfere with their business and need to be taken care of immediately. Unlike residential renters who need the help of a landlord to take care of repairs. The updates done on commercial property can be fairly substantial and stay with the space when the business moves on.

Companies usually need to put in networking and cable wires, sound systems, and electrical outlets. All of which increase the market value and marketability of your commercial space. If you are interested in buying and renting property do not over look the benefits of buying commercial property.

It is far more passive then residential real estate and appreciates in value much quicker. Being a commercial 'landlord' is far easier and you have the ability to network with people and businesses which you may work with in the future.

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
me a blank e-mail on the following address:
barfootandthompson@getresponse.com

Thursday, August 23, 2007

House of cards -- Housing Market Outlook and Commentary

In many countries the stockmarket bubble has been replaced by a property-price bubble. Sooner or later it will burst, says Pam Woodall, The Economist magazine's economics editor.

“BUYING property is by far the safest investment you can make. House prices will never fall like share prices.” This is the advice offered by countless estate agents around the globe. In the absence of attractive investment opportunities elsewhere, home buyers have needed little encouragement: from London to Madrid and from Washington to Sydney, rising house prices have been the hot topic of conversation at dinner parties. Over the past seven years, house prices in many countries have risen at their fastest rate ever in real terms. And now institutional investors are also eagerly shifting money from equities into commercial property. Many property analysts scoff at the suggestion that another bubble is in the making. House prices may have fallen after previous booms, but “this time is different”, they insist. That is precisely what equity analysts said when share prices soared in the late 1990s. They were proved wrong. Will the property experts suffer the same fate?

This survey will examine investors' current love affair with both residential and commercial property (or real estate, as Americans call it). It will explore the latest trends in property prices around the globe and consider different methods of estimating fair value in order to assess whether there is a bubble. This may well be the single most important question currently hanging over the world economy. Given the fragile state of many economies, the bursting of a housing bubble could easily drag them into recession.

Property is probably the biggest business in the world. By one estimate, construction, the buying, selling and renting of properties and the imputed benefits to owner-occupiers account for around 15% of rich countries'GDP. Property also makes up around two-thirds of the tangible capital stock in most economies. Most important of all, property is by far the world's biggest single asset class. Investors have much more money tied up in property than in shares or bonds (see chart 1).

A lot more people own homes than own shares. In all the big developed economies bar Germany, well over half of all households are home-owners (see chart 2). In most of Europe and Australia, housing accounts for 40-60% of total household wealth, and in America for about 30%. And even in America the typical household on an average income holds six times as much wealth in residential property as in shares.

Yet, curiously, there has been much less economic research into the property market than into the stockmarket, the bond market or the foreign-exchange market. One reason is that until recently much of this property investment was held fairly passively. For most people a home was simply a place to live. For most firms offices were a necessary but relatively unimportant part of their infrastructure. Commercial property made up less than 5% of most institutional investors' portfolios. But now many people, having lost faith in shares, see their home as an investment that will appreciate rapidly in value. Financial institutions are also pushing up the share of commercial property in their portfolios. To both sorts of investor, property seems to offer attractively high returns—as well as a safe haven in an increasingly risky world.

Betting the house

Over the past few years, house prices have been booming almost everywhere except Germany and Japan. Since the mid-1990s, house prices in Australia, Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden have all risen by more than 50% in real terms. American house prices are up a more modest 30%, but that is still the biggest real gain over any such period in recorded history. Commercial-property prices in some big cities have also been looking rather frothy.

These property booms have been partly driven by economic fundamentals, but bubble-like symptoms abound. Real-estate investment has even made it into a TV series, “The Sopranos”. In one recent episode, the wife of Tony, the Mafia boss, suggested he invest in a real-estate investment trust (a fund which enables small investors to buy commercial property). Many viewers took her advice.

Rewards from investing in property in the past are certainly impressive. In Britain, for example, over the past ten years the total return from both commercial and residential property (including rental income) has been well over 10%, beating the return on equities or gilts. Over the past three years, British house prices have risen by 55%, whereas share prices are 40% down.

Over the past ten years, the total return from buying a house (including the implicit rental income) has exceeded the return from shares in half the countries in chart 3. But these figures understate the possible gains from investing in property. Unlike equities, most homes are bought with borrowed money, and the resulting leverage can greatly lift the return on the initial stake (or increase any loss). Suppose you had invested $20,000 in shares, which after five years are now worth $40,000, including reinvested dividends, implying an annual return of 15%. Then suppose you had used the $20,000 as a deposit on a $100,000 house that over five years had risen in value by a more modest 7% a year, to $140,000. Assume, for simplicity, that mortgage-interest payments and maintenance costs exactly offset the rental income. The average annual return on your deposit would have been almost 25%.

In addition, the taxman tends to treat housing far more favourably than financial assets. In most countries, owner-occupiers get tax relief on their mortgage interest payments or first-time buyers get a tax credit, and owner-occupiers are at least partially exempt from capital-gains tax. Admittedly the transaction costs of buying and selling property are high, but on reasonable assumptions the after-tax return from housing over the past decade has exceeded that from shares in most countries.

How long can the party last? Estate agents, builders, lenders, many economists and even Alan Greenspan, chairman of America's Federal Reserve, have all insisted that there is no house-price bubble. Rising house prices, the argument goes, are fully justified by low interest rates, rising real incomes, growing populations and a fixed supply of land. But this sounds a little like the “wall of money” argument used to defend inflated share prices in the late 1990s. Prices had to rise, it was said, because the number of shares in which pension funds could invest their billions was limited. Investors mistakenly came to believe that the traditional link between share prices and profits no longer mattered. Home-owners may be making a similar mistake today.

It is often argued that property is a much safer investment than shares because a share is just a (possibly worthless) piece of paper, whereas bricks and mortar are something tangible. Yet that tells us nothing about their relative value. Bubbles form when the price of any asset gets out of line with its underlying value.

Home prices are not listed daily in the Financial Times, but the same sort of valuation analysis can be applied to houses as to shares. The price you pay for a property should reflect the future rent at which you could let it. The fact that in many countries prices of homes and commercial buildings have been rising much faster than rents should be ringing alarm bells.

Housing is just as prone to irrational exuberance as is the stockmarket. Property is increasingly viewed as an easy way to make money. People buy a home in the expectation that its price will continue to rise strongly over time. Such expectations lie at the heart of all bubbles. Given the boom in the property market over the past few years, at the very least house-buyers betting on further rapid house-price gains are likely to be disappointed. Worse, there is a risk that house prices will take such a tumble that they take whole economies with them.

Vicious cycles

Swings in property prices can have a big impact on economic growth. Since the IT and stockmarket bubbles burst, rising property prices around the globe have helped to prop up the world economy. Rising house prices have boosted consumer spending by making people feel wealthier, offsetting the effect of falling share prices. Consumers have also been able to borrow more against the higher value of their homes, turning capital gains into cash which they can spend on a new car or a holiday. For firms, property is the main form of collateral for borrowing, so swings in commercial-property prices can also influence corporate investment.

But just as rising house prices help to boost spending, so falling house prices can cause economic pain. In an analysis of a number of earlier housing bubbles, the IMF's latest World Economic Outlook found that output losses after house-price busts in rich countries have on average been twice as large as those after stockmarket crashes. The average real decline after a house-price bust has been more modest than after a stockmarket crash (30% over four years against 45% over two-and-and-half years), but at the end of that period GDP had fallen by an average of 8% relative to its previous growth trend, compared with 4% after a share-price bust. The IMF also found that a sharp rise in house prices in real terms is much more likely to be followed by a bust than is a share-price boom.

There are three reasons why a house-price bubble might cause more harm on bursting than a stockmarket bubble. First, house prices have a bigger wealth effect on consumer spending, largely because more people own their homes than own shares. A study of 14 countries by three American economists, Karl Case, John Quigley and Robert Shiller, found that in most economies a change in property prices had at least twice as big an effect on consumer spending as a change in share prices of the same order.

Second, people are much more likely to borrow to buy a home than to buy shares. Some of them inevitably borrow too much and later have to curb their spending. Third, a decline in property prices also leaves some households with homes worth less than the amount they have borrowed, so housing busts have a greater effect on banks, which are typically heavily exposed to real estate. Falling house prices lead to an increase in banks' non-performing loans, and as their collateral shrinks, so does their capacity to lend.

This survey will conclude that the latest housing boom has inflated bubbles in several countries, notably America, Australia, Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands and Spain. Within the next year or so those bubbles are likely to burst, leading to falls in average real house prices of 15-20% in America and 30% or more elsewhere over the next few years, in line with average price declines during past housing-market busts. This time, however, with inflation so low, house prices will fall more sharply in money terms than they did in the past. In Britain as a whole, for example, average nominal house prices are likely to drop by 20-25%, and in London by much more. Significant numbers of owners may be left with homes worth less than their mortgages—especially as the proportion of owner-occupiers with mortgages exceeding 80% of the value of their homes is higher now than it was in the previous bust in the early 1990s.

There are already signs in some cities, such as London, New York and Amsterdam, that the housing market is cooling fast, but estate agents still insist that prices are unlikely to fall by much. Tell that to the couple who bought a four-bedroom house in San Francisco for $2.1m in 2000, then divorced and had to sell the house only two years later for $1.45m.

PLEASE NOTE - THIS ARTICLE WAS PUBLISHED ON 29 MAY 2003. THE SO CALLED IMMINENT BUBBLE IS YET TO BURST

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
me a blank e-mail on the following address:
barfootandthompson@getresponse.com

Is a capital gains tax looming closer to New Zealand Market?

On the 6th of April the Reserve Bank together with Treasury released a report with the grand title "Supplementary Stabilisation Instruments". The title would put you off before you even start. Massive volumes of paper were produced and you would be forgiven if your eyes glazed over a quarter of the way through to eventually dismiss it as yet another "burp" from officialdom as the Minister of Finance Dr Cullen once described such reports.

This report is the second missive in recent months from Treasury and the Reserve Bank on the same subject (the first being a statement that this full report was being prepared). It is a fuller and more comprehensive version of that previous paper on how to cool the rampant housing market.

If you are a residential property investor, or even a simple home owner, then get hold of this report and make careful notes. (You can download it here.) Of even more interest was the accompanying letter signed by the Governor of the Reserve Bank Alan Bollard addressed to the Minister of Finance Dr Michael Cullen which summed up the thinking of the pointy heads as they mulled over how to pull the rug out from under the housing market. Their ideas range from loopy to downright dangerous -- but that's not the point. The whole point of the exercise is to give the Government ideas on how to dampen the housing market. In other words the Reserve Bank has done the dirty work so, should the time come, the Government can say "we had independent advice" and that this has all been "in the public domain" for months etc. etc.

Sooner rather than later
However if any action is planned it would have to be early in the life of the present government. Controversial taxes or interference in the market would be the kiss of death in the lead up to an election year so it has to be now or never. The good news is that the market seems to be cooling down by itself -- as all markets do. Should the market continue to correct itself over the next few months then it is likely nothing more need be done and we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief (until next time that is). But if the headlines keep gushing about massive property price rises, booming townships and spectacular profits out of property then I am afraid, as sure as night follows day, the axe will fall.

What isn't helping are the shameless spruikers who keep advertising that in only "four action packed hours" everyone can be rich through property (only $39.99). This sort of rubbish plays straight into the hands of the bureaucrats who are charged with "Stabilising the Economy". Why people bother to attend these joke presentations is beyond me -- but we all know "there's one born every minute".

Then of course we have the banks which are doing their damnedest to keep pushing prices up. Currently Kiwis owe $114 Billion in mortgages, a huge increase over the previous years. The BNZ boasts that it lent an extra $610 million in loans in the last quarter and this begs the question: Where is all the money coming from? Well I can tell you that a lot comes from overseas lenders. 'Our' banks and finance companies are borrowing overseas at cheap rates (e.g. 4% from the US, 2.5% from Japan) and on-lending it to us here at 7.5% to 19%. A nice little earner if you can pull it off.

Conversely, overseas banks are pouring in cash to take advantage of our high interest rates -- among the highest in the Western World in fact. The trouble will come when it's time to pay these loans back. The NZ dollar has depreciated by so much and so rapidly that I am picking that some finance houses could be in trouble finding enough newly-depreciated NZ dollars to pay back the overseas bankers the original value of their loans! Not everyone has hedged their loans because the cost can be prohibitively high (especially now that the dollar is dropping!)

Desperate measures So what exactly does this Treasury-Reserve Bank report suggest as a means to cool the property market?
In its opening paragraphs the report states that "the housing market is currently more stretched than any time since the housing boom of the early 1970s." I was around in the early 1970s and I saw what happened. Prices leapt up -- just as they have this time -- resulting in a 'Property Speculation Tax' which confiscated 90% of any profits made within two years of purchase. Can it happen again? Well, read the report:
One of the ideas is to bring in (or at least apply more harshly) a capital gains tax. I quote: "further measures can be employed to reinforce existing tax law applying to capital gains on housing. For example a reporting requirement could be imposed in respect of all sales of residential property occurring within (say) two years of acquisition..." (Sound familiar?)

But wait, there's more. Some of the other loopy ideas include: (1) Tightening up the amount banks can lend on housing, by requiring them to keep more cash on hand at all times "a comprehensive loan-to-value ratio limit, applicable to all loans secured on residential properties by all lenders. This measure would have a direct impact on the most leveraged portion of the housing market." There would go 100% finance. There would go the chance for the needy to get into a home. There would go encouragement to provide rental accommodation. And here would come a windfall for the loan sharks who will eagerly fill the gaps.

(2) Doing away with the benefits of LAQC 's by eliminating or curtailing losses so that these losses could not be used to offset personal taxes.

(3) Putting a "levy" i.e. a tax on interest paid on a mortgage "an adjustable mortgage interest levy, which could be imposed on all mortgages on residential property and designed to force a wedge between the price paid for credit by borrowers and the returns available to savers financing those loans." Nice one that! Interest rates are starting to cripple many borrowers already. A "levy" would be the final blow.

(4) Finally how about this suggestion: "it may be appropriate to consider further tax measures such as tightening the tax net on profits made on properties held for relatively short periods and/or ring fencing operating losses on investment properties." This has shades of the old 'Property Speculation Tax' and reinforces the question around the use of LAQCs etc to minimize personal tax.

There were several more suggestions all as loopy as the others -- but that's not the point. The point is that this report is most likely the final warning to the market.

It is indeed fortunate that the latest statistics show that the housing market is cooling quite significantly both in price and turnover. Even the bank economists admit "negatives far outweigh the positives for the property market" with negative factors including "low employment growth, below average net migration inflows, rising average mortgage rates, lower consumer confidence and a continuing stream of new property". So, with fingers crossed, it is more and more likely that we will avoid being burdened with the crackpot ideas of the bureaucrats ... for the time being. But you can never be too careful. We have populist left-leaning government backed by even more left wing smaller parties in coalition so anything is possible. History shows that reason and logic are often sacrificed in the name of idealism and power.

And Michael Cullen is quite capable of pulling surprises out of the hat. Consider how swiftly he changed rules allowing Trusts to split income to minor beneficiaries (from 19% to 33% tax rate overnight) and how on his watch the IRD is knocking back chattels depreciation for residential investors. Already we've seen commentators bemoan the 'lost opportunity' for a capital gains tax. If that's how the business writers think we have to be ever more vigilant because their influence in shaping public opinion must not be under-estimated.

It is also interesting to note that the Reserve Bank was instructed not to discuss a capital gains tax per se. Silence is a form of communication as we all know. Had it been raised in the report there would have been hell to pay and riots in the streets. Watch this space.

Be Prepared:
Whether or not a capital gains tax is ever introduced it is never too early to be prepared.
To this end I would recommend:
(1) Selling off poor quality property while the going is (relatively) good.
(2) Reducing debt.
(3) Deciding whether or not to hold on to your current investments for at least the next five years -- if not, get out of the market now.
(4) Look at commercial property as a better alternative. The real returns are higher and with less emotion it runs on different rails from residential.
(5) Don't believe the rubbish put out by the spruikers promising you instant wealth through residential property.
(6) Put spare cash into solid banks and finance companies even if the rates being offered are lower.
(7) Don't go into big-time developing at this point unless you're fully cashed up.
(8) Buy alternative investments which have international value e.g. art, antiques, gold, foreign cash accounts or blue chip shares as a natural hedge against any down turn or interference in the property market.
(9) Get advice from truly impartial experts and be prepared to pay for it.

Last words
Be warned. Make hay while the sun still shines. Re-organising your property portfolio can take months if not years. Dragging your feet could be injurious to your financial health.

Olly Newland
April 2006

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
me a blank e-mail on the following address:
barfootandthompson@getresponse.com

Is a capital gains tax looming closer?

On the 6th of April the Reserve Bank together with Treasury released a report with the grand title "Supplementary Stabilisation Instruments". The title would put you off before you even start. Massive volumes of paper were produced and you would be forgiven if your eyes glazed over a quarter of the way through to eventually dismiss it as yet another "burp" from officialdom as the Minister of Finance Dr Cullen once described such reports.

This report is the second missive in recent months from Treasury and the Reserve Bank on the same subject (the first being a statement that this full report was being prepared). It is a fuller and more comprehensive version of that previous paper on how to cool the rampant housing market.

If you are a residential property investor, or even a simple home owner, then get hold of this report and make careful notes. (You can download it here.) Of even more interest was the accompanying letter signed by the Governor of the Reserve Bank Alan Bollard addressed to the Minister of Finance Dr Michael Cullen which summed up the thinking of the pointy heads as they mulled over how to pull the rug out from under the housing market. Their ideas range from loopy to downright dangerous -- but that's not the point. The whole point of the exercise is to give the Government ideas on how to dampen the housing market. In other words the Reserve Bank has done the dirty work so, should the time come, the Government can say "we had independent advice" and that this has all been "in the public domain" for months etc. etc.

Sooner rather than later
However if any action is planned it would have to be early in the life of the present government. Controversial taxes or interference in the market would be the kiss of death in the lead up to an election year so it has to be now or never. The good news is that the market seems to be cooling down by itself -- as all markets do. Should the market continue to correct itself over the next few months then it is likely nothing more need be done and we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief (until next time that is). But if the headlines keep gushing about massive property price rises, booming townships and spectacular profits out of property then I am afraid, as sure as night follows day, the axe will fall.

What isn't helping are the shameless spruikers who keep advertising that in only "four action packed hours" everyone can be rich through property (only $39.99). This sort of rubbish plays straight into the hands of the bureaucrats who are charged with "Stabilising the Economy". Why people bother to attend these joke presentations is beyond me -- but we all know "there's one born every minute".

Then of course we have the banks which are doing their damnedest to keep pushing prices up. Currently Kiwis owe $114 Billion in mortgages, a huge increase over the previous years. The BNZ boasts that it lent an extra $610 million in loans in the last quarter and this begs the question: Where is all the money coming from? Well I can tell you that a lot comes from overseas lenders. 'Our' banks and finance companies are borrowing overseas at cheap rates (e.g. 4% from the US, 2.5% from Japan) and on-lending it to us here at 7.5% to 19%. A nice little earner if you can pull it off.

Conversely, overseas banks are pouring in cash to take advantage of our high interest rates -- among the highest in the Western World in fact. The trouble will come when it's time to pay these loans back. The NZ dollar has depreciated by so much and so rapidly that I am picking that some finance houses could be in trouble finding enough newly-depreciated NZ dollars to pay back the overseas bankers the original value of their loans! Not everyone has hedged their loans because the cost can be prohibitively high (especially now that the dollar is dropping!)

Desperate measures So what exactly does this Treasury-Reserve Bank report suggest as a means to cool the property market?
In its opening paragraphs the report states that "the housing market is currently more stretched than any time since the housing boom of the early 1970s." I was around in the early 1970s and I saw what happened. Prices leapt up -- just as they have this time -- resulting in a 'Property Speculation Tax' which confiscated 90% of any profits made within two years of purchase. Can it happen again? Well, read the report:
One of the ideas is to bring in (or at least apply more harshly) a capital gains tax. I quote: "further measures can be employed to reinforce existing tax law applying to capital gains on housing. For example a reporting requirement could be imposed in respect of all sales of residential property occurring within (say) two years of acquisition..." (Sound familiar?)

But wait, there's more. Some of the other loopy ideas include: (1) Tightening up the amount banks can lend on housing, by requiring them to keep more cash on hand at all times "a comprehensive loan-to-value ratio limit, applicable to all loans secured on residential properties by all lenders. This measure would have a direct impact on the most leveraged portion of the housing market." There would go 100% finance. There would go the chance for the needy to get into a home. There would go encouragement to provide rental accommodation. And here would come a windfall for the loan sharks who will eagerly fill the gaps.

(2) Doing away with the benefits of LAQC 's by eliminating or curtailing losses so that these losses could not be used to offset personal taxes.

(3) Putting a "levy" i.e. a tax on interest paid on a mortgage "an adjustable mortgage interest levy, which could be imposed on all mortgages on residential property and designed to force a wedge between the price paid for credit by borrowers and the returns available to savers financing those loans." Nice one that! Interest rates are starting to cripple many borrowers already. A "levy" would be the final blow.

(4) Finally how about this suggestion: "it may be appropriate to consider further tax measures such as tightening the tax net on profits made on properties held for relatively short periods and/or ring fencing operating losses on investment properties." This has shades of the old 'Property Speculation Tax' and reinforces the question around the use of LAQCs etc to minimize personal tax.

There were several more suggestions all as loopy as the others -- but that's not the point. The point is that this report is most likely the final warning to the market.

It is indeed fortunate that the latest statistics show that the housing market is cooling quite significantly both in price and turnover. Even the bank economists admit "negatives far outweigh the positives for the property market" with negative factors including "low employment growth, below average net migration inflows, rising average mortgage rates, lower consumer confidence and a continuing stream of new property". So, with fingers crossed, it is more and more likely that we will avoid being burdened with the crackpot ideas of the bureaucrats ... for the time being. But you can never be too careful. We have populist left-leaning government backed by even more left wing smaller parties in coalition so anything is possible. History shows that reason and logic are often sacrificed in the name of idealism and power.

And Michael Cullen is quite capable of pulling surprises out of the hat. Consider how swiftly he changed rules allowing Trusts to split income to minor beneficiaries (from 19% to 33% tax rate overnight) and how on his watch the IRD is knocking back chattels depreciation for residential investors. Already we've seen commentators bemoan the 'lost opportunity' for a capital gains tax. If that's how the business writers think we have to be ever more vigilant because their influence in shaping public opinion must not be under-estimated.

It is also interesting to note that the Reserve Bank was instructed not to discuss a capital gains tax per se. Silence is a form of communication as we all know. Had it been raised in the report there would have been hell to pay and riots in the streets. Watch this space.

Be Prepared:
Whether or not a capital gains tax is ever introduced it is never too early to be prepared.
To this end I would recommend:
(1) Selling off poor quality property while the going is (relatively) good.
(2) Reducing debt.
(3) Deciding whether or not to hold on to your current investments for at least the next five years -- if not, get out of the market now.
(4) Look at commercial property as a better alternative. The real returns are higher and with less emotion it runs on different rails from residential.
(5) Don't believe the rubbish put out by the spruikers promising you instant wealth through residential property.
(6) Put spare cash into solid banks and finance companies even if the rates being offered are lower.
(7) Don't go into big-time developing at this point unless you're fully cashed up.
(8) Buy alternative investments which have international value e.g. art, antiques, gold, foreign cash accounts or blue chip shares as a natural hedge against any down turn or interference in the property market.
(9) Get advice from truly impartial experts and be prepared to pay for it.

Last words
Be warned. Make hay while the sun still shines. Re-organising your property portfolio can take months if not years. Dragging your feet could be injurious to your financial health.

Olly Newland
April 2006

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
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Up She Rises -- Olly Newland's Column, May 2007

Up She Rises

What shall we do with the drunken sailor?
What she we do with the drunken sailor?
What shall we do with he drunken sailor early in the morning?
Hooray-up she rises, Hooray-up she rises
Hooray-up she rises early in the morning. etc etc
(18th century sea shanty)

This catchy song stuck in my mind when Mr Bollard Governor of the Reserve Bank once again raised interest rates another quarter percent. This gives me the impression that all who work in the RB must be smoking or imbibing some strong stuff if they believe that interest rate hikes will achieve much if anything to dampen the housing market.

What a waste of time and effort. Does he really think that the property market gives a rat's bum whether or not he raises interest rates?
Property owners and investors alike have been having a non-stop wild party for years now and the band keeps playing on.

What can a small rate increase possibly do to stop the music?
Nothing!

Work it out for yourself. Take the average Joe Bloggs investor with a $400,000 investment property and a $300,000 mortgage.
Another quarter percent on the interest adds a piffling (tax deductible) $750 p.a. to Joe's outgoings...
At the same time the property's value increases by 10% which adds $40,000 to Joe's Statement of Position.

That's what I call good deal. Let's have some more please!

For a mere $750 outlay Joe earns $40,000 capital gain per year (well, until the slump, anyway. Then it's a different story -- so don't count on it.) A few lattes and a wine or two less, maybe switch to 91 octane petrol for the Ferrari and Joe's got it covered.

The same thing happened back in the 1980s.
Interest rates were running at 18%-22% for first mortgages but we didn't care bit.
Property prices were rising by 100% per annum.
It was a good deal even if we had to refinance every six months to pay the interest.

The difference came when somebody switched off the lights and the band went home.
Then it was a whole new ball game.

What I've come to see is that interest rate rises, although seductive to the Reserve Bank, are NOT the answer. They hurt all the wrong people, and in the end, achieve nothing.

We have:
(a) First home buyers being shut out of the market more firmly than ever. You only have to read the papers to told about that.
(b) Exporters are laying off staff and exporting jobs to Asia because our dollar remains stronger than it should (e.g. Fisher and Paykel)
(c) Rents are rising faster and faster as first home buyers capitulate and choose renting for life as an option creating a Catch 22 situation.

Of course there are those that say that the homeless have nobody but themselves to blame for living high and not saving.
But how can they save? A third of their wages is confiscated by income tax, another third is taken by GST and other government and local government charges, then they have to pay the rent, and buy the groceries -- so what's left?

Diddly-squat, that's what.

If the government really wants to temper property prices rises then the best method is to create other forms of investment that are equally attractive, e.g. tax-free savings accounts, a better business regime for manufacturers (just see how they encourage business in Ireland and Thailand for instance) or cutting the huge costs of subdividing and navigating through the Resource Management Act. A friend of mine who is developing a mid-range residential property which should sell for around $800,000 spent over $100,000(!) in fees and costs to get a resource consent, paying endless council fees, water fees, etc. if that's not inflationary, I don't know what is.

PRIZES

The top prizes for the most loopy suggestions to cool the market (or just grizzle about it) are as follows:

In tenth place: Andrew King of APIA who was foolhardy enough to tell the truth that aspiring home owners should cut back expenses and save. Right on the button Andrew, but not very PC with a Socialist-Green-Maori-NZ First mishmash government in place where the lowest common denominator rules.

In ninth place: Mary Holm for consistency in giving the dumbest advice to home owners for the longest period of time. Anyone believing her should have lost their shirt by now.

In eighth place: Chris Carter Minister for Homelessness who suggests that developers should build cheap houses among the expensive houses. Very clever. No one will buy the expensive homes if they think that riff-raff are going to live next door with loud music, wild dogs, and drunken parties all night long.

In seventh place: The Minister of Finance Michael Cullen whose suggestion of a 10 cents per litre fuel tax, if implemented, would push up prices for all inner city suburbs, hit the poor the most, and make living in the cheaper outer areas even more unaffordable. (He qualifies for several more prizes but this will have to do.)

In sixth place: BNZ Chief economist Tony Alexander who believes that "prices are exactly where they should be." Tony! Wake up and smell the coffee.

In fifth place: A 'class prize' to opinion writers and media columnists for displaying total ignorance in climbing on the well-worn bandwagon of blaming "speculators" for pushing up property prices when in reality it's the Mums and Dads selling their own homes for tax-free profits who are the worst speculators of the lot. Special mention to the NZ Herald's Brain Rudman and Tapu Misa. These walking cliches want a capital gains tax applied to "speculators" despite the fact that it doesn't work -- as seen overseas: countries who have capital gains tax still have had rampant property price rises. Their theory is such a tax would slow down speculators from turning properties over quickly for profits despite the fact that they are subject to income tax already, and despite the fact that holding back properties pushes up prices not lowers them.

In fourth place: The Boffins at Treasury who dreamt up the idea of a "mortgage levy" where mortgages carried a penalty levy while other interest charges did not. The idea was sunk without a trace at the first salvo and with no survivors.

In Third Place and Bronze Medal Winner: Chris & Gaby Munro who rent in middle-class Sunnynook and who railed through the news media that although in their late 30's they can't afford a house despite earning $95,000 per annum and spawning two cherubic kids. see NZ Herald

In Second Place and Silver Medal Winner : the Government idea of 'Shared Equity'. A recipe guaranteed to ramp up prices higher still, with no real explanation of what will happen when a home owner with the government as a partner wants to sell. How do you work out who gets what if the home owner has improved the property with his own sweat (not to mention purchases) in the meantime?

In first place and Gold Medal Winner for the Loopiest Idea of Them All goes to: Comrade Adele Pullen of Manurewa who wrote in the Herald on 30th May:
"Would it help first home buyers if there was a law that required that all houses bought had to be owner-occupied for the first 10 years of ownership with stiff fines for anyone illegally renting them?"
It's good to know that Communism is alive and well and living in South Auckland.

It seems to me that some of the "homeless" have a noxious notion that they are entitled to a home, free of charge, with no effort required and the reason they can't get one is because the "speculators" have bought the lot. You can just see them linking arms and marching through the streets with Sue (don't smack my kid) Bradford to the fore, singing the famous ballad:

"It's the same the 'ole world over
It's the poor wot gets the blame
While the rich 'as all the pleasure
Now ain't that a bleedin' shame"
Etc

COLIN KUMAR
Barfoot & Thompson Commercial
m. 64 27 684 1114 | p. 649 358 0989
c.kumar@barfoot.co.nz

I use an e-mail subscription service to avoid spam problems and keep in contact with my clients.Timely information is the key to succeed in real estate. Incase you have not subscribed to my news letter please send me an email and I will send you the subscription link. Alternately, you can send
me a blank e-mail on the following address:
barfootandthompson@getresponse.com