Monday, 19 February 2018

Filling up (Brisbane apartments)

Cranewatch redux

I've done lots and lots and lots and LOTS of posts about the statistics behind Brisbane's apartment building boom.

When all's said and done Brisbane construction and apartment pre-sales are slowing up, while population growth into Brisbane is picking up strongly.

All that remains to be seen, then, is how quickly or otherwise the new flood of supply is absorbed. 

Here's a short blog with no statistics at all, just some photos from a major construction hotspot: Newstead. 

What was previously a great big planning hole, is now home to apartments, a supermarket, shopping centre, bars, and restaurants, all within easy walking distance of the Teneriffe ferry terminal, and a very short distance of the Central Business District (CBD) of Brisbane. 

I go to Newstead for a coffee most mornings these days - there's quite a bit going on around the gasworks area, not least in terms of cranes and construction! 

While other cities already have many attached dwellings, this style and scale of development is relatively new for Brisbane, and is resulting in a record uplift to apartment stock. 


There is still a fair amount of construction work ongoing, although the bulk of the new volume is either now completed or close to being completed. 

The large tower block in the centre of shot - Haven Apartments - only completed in October, so there are still plenty of rentals available here.  


Some of the apartment construction still underway - to the right of shot, Aveo, has yet to complete.


That said, Aveo is targeted at a different demographic, being retirement living, and arguably there is far more of a need for this type of development as opposed to the generic investor stock.

As an aside, isn't that one smug-looking Baby Boomer?!



There are some other more boutique blocks yet to finish around the old gasworks.


And Mirvac has its Unison/Waterfront stages close to the Brisbane River with some of its 2- and 3-bedroom apartments yet to be sold.

As suggested by the faded signboards, these stages have been a little while coming.



In saying that, there are many things to worry about in Brisbane's apartment market, but Mirvac's developments are not one of them.

Mirvac has earned a well-deserved reputation for delivering high-quality stock with great appeal to homebuyers, and this location will doubtless be no different.

Filling up

You can study charts and statistics until the ink falls off the page, but there's nothing quite like going for a look around, especially the old 'lights on' test. 

Some photos, then, from Sunday night at 7.30pm.

Of course, the nature of apartment living at weekends is that not all lights will be on, as people eat out more than they used to, and so on. 

But it's not a bad indicator, especially when you compare to blog posts from a year or two ago, when all I was shooting was essentially empty balconies with no furniture, or indeed any signs of life at all. 

As you can see to the left of shot, Haven still has some empty apartments on the rental market.

But for a block that settled only a few months ago, it's clearly filling up. 


Zooming in the shot a little, the occupancy rate looks to be in reasonable nick, all things considered. 

The 2016 Census showed that second only to Sydney, Brisbane had the lowest rate of vacant dwellings on Census night, which might surprise a few people.

Hang on that's a statistic, and I said I'd avoid those for this post. 

We know from previous cycles in other cities that when there is a surge in completions then vacancy rates can spike, the question is how long for? 


Haven apartments from the front.


Spinning the shot around 90 degrees or so to the left, the dark matter to the right of shot is Aveo, yet to be completed. 


Buzzing...

As for the amenities, they are absolutely buzzing with activity, even quite late on a Sunday night.

Restaurants, cafes, bars...all packed out.


I visited a couple of bars last night (for research purposes only) and they were absolutely pumping with activity, with families, older types, and actual real-life young people out enjoying themselves. 

More than anything else this cements in my head that Newstead will be a success over the next couple of years, at least as a concept, even if apartment rents and prices are soft.


Haven from the rear.


New mid-sized blocks yet to complete (more dark matter).


The old gasworks, lit up Brisbane-stylee.


Overall, this has become something of a place to be.


The wrap

While Brisbane's apartment market is generally discussed in negative terms, there is also much to be positive about here. 

It's absolutely true that too much generic investor-targeted stock has been built, including 60 square metre apartments, or blocks built close to busy highways and sold to interstate or international investors. 

But in saying that, city-wide apartment rents have eased, and both young and older people are clearly centralising. 

Brisbane has more than its fair share of decrepit housing stock, and in turn the new construction is forcing landlords either to improve what they offer to the market or hand over their rentals to homebuyers (or to developers that will invest in improving it). 

There are so many people relocating up to Brisbane now or immigrating from overseas that the apartment market looks set to rebalance as new unit construction grinds to a halt. 

With apartment rents starting anywhere from the high $300s/week, it's not that much of a surprise that folks are shunning older stock in suburbia for walkability and proximity to the city lights. 

Please subscribe for my new newsletter

Please subscribe for my new fortnightly newsletter here.

This newsletter is a bit different to the content here...subscribe to find out how.


You get a free 80-page e-book when you subscribe.

Looking forward to it!

Saturday, 17 February 2018

Friday, 16 February 2018

Weekend reads - must see articles of the week

It's been some week!

I had an excruciatingly painful cracked tooth and a filling done, the humidity has been off the charts in Brisbane, but we got some good stuff done as well. 

In the end, there wasn'tmuch time left for sifting through the week's news.

Fortunately the must read pieces are summarised for you here at Property Update (or click the image below).


Subscribe for the free newsletter while you're there too. 

Thursday, 15 February 2018

Sweet 16, as Queensland jobs growth surges

16 on the bounce

Yet another month of employment growth, this time up a seasonally adjusted +16,000 to 12,453,500, to make it 16 gains in a row, which is a record for the Australian economy. 


Annual employment growth remained very strong at +403,000 or +3.35 per cent, but this month there was a wild swing towards part-time work, which stripped the positive sheen off the result. 

By far and away the most jobs were added in Queensland in the month at +19,700, although this month's gains were of the part-time vintage. 

Queensland's economy added +118,000 jobs over the past year, which represents a huge rate of statewide employment growth at +5 per cent, with +91,600 of those being full-time positions.


The participation rate was down a notch in January, but the trend has been up to around the highest level in 7 years, with Queensland being one of the states to see a marked lift in recent times. 


Unemployment rate flattening

The unemployment rate ticked down a notch to 5.49 per cent, but the downtrend seems to have lost its way a bit. 


At the state level, New South Wales and to a lesser extent Victoria look to be in reasonably good nick from an unemployment rate perspective, but Tasmania clearly wins the most improved mantle as the state's mini-boom continues. 


Finally the trend annual change in hours worked also slowed to +2.7 per cent - another softer indicator, reflecting more part-time roles and plenty of slack in the labour force. 


The wrap

Not a bad headline result but softer underlying figures, and the unemployment rate at ~5.5 per cent looks too high to be associated with significant wage pressures.

It's only one month of figures, of course, but this may herald a looming slowdown in the very high rate of employment growth seen in 2017. 

Wednesday, 14 February 2018

Wealth in abundance (FREE E-BOOK)

Download your free copy of my 80-page e-book here (or click the image below).


If you're interested in the ideas in this book, stay tuned for my online course coming soon.

Land supply fails to keep pace

Land prices soar

The Housing Industry Association (HIA) reported that vacant land prices soared by +6.5 per cent to an all-time high median price of $267,368 in the September 2017 quarter. 

That's a huge quarterly increase, and came as the sheer pace of demand outstripped supply, with quarterly sales volumes having declined by more than a quarter since 2015.


Over the past five years median land prices nationally have increased by 40 per cent. 

This has mainly been a capital city phenomenon, with the average increase being significantly greater across the capitals. 


Much of the activity took place on Melbourne's city fringe, with more than a fifth of transactions over the year to September taking place in the Victorian capital. 

Melbourne recorded all-time high median prices for vacant lots in the September quarter...


...and so did Sydney. 


Elsewhere, in the ABS figures I noted the sheer level of demand for land in Melbourne and Geelong has seen record levels of finance commitments for residential blocks. 


Sydney has seen the level of transactions fall, yet prices have continued to rise, while block sizes have shrunk. 


Thus on a price per square metre basis, land prices have risen strongly in all of the mainland capitals over the past decade.