Thursday, February 13, 2014

AUSTRALIA'S real estate market is in a bubble

AUSTRALIA'S real estate market is in a bubble that will burst and wipe out up to half the value of property, a leading US economist has predicted.
And Melbourne will join Sydney as the hardest hit.
Harry Dent, a widely respected economist and demographer who has predicted a range of economic events including the 2008 global financial crisis, pointed to falling affordability in Melbourne and Sydney where prices are ten times the average income.
"Bubbles ultimately peak when the people buying can't afford to buy it," Mr Dent said.
"Melbourne has been, actually, the biggest bubble in recent years and I would expect the biggest burst there.
"In Australia obviously the bigger bubbles are in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth because they had the greatest growth and the greatest limitations in supply - but not quite as much in Adelaide and other cities."
The bubble would burst after a crash in the stock market and would be linked to an anticipated crash in the Chinese property market.
Mr Dent, who headlines a Secure the Future event in Sydney and Brisbane later this month, said most global markets, from London to a number of US cities, would also face market reductions.
"I see it like a popcorn popper, different markets are bursting at different times … but all of real estate in coastal cities all around the world is greatly overvalued and they're all going to burst whether it be 30 per cent or 40 per cent ... or 90 per cent in the worst case," Mr Dent said.
He said that worst case scenario would likely be China. Surging interest in Australian property from Chinese investors could be a sign the Asian superpower's rich were afraid of a looming crash at home.
"They want to leave the country, a lot of people have already left - and their favourite places to go are Australia, Canada, the US and New Zealand and London," he said.
Mr Dent has predicted the economic and real estate bubble in China will burst in the next couple of years, and Australia would be hit hard when it does.
"The China bubble is going to burst, starting around next year, and it is going to be the biggest bubble to burst. It is the greatest bubble, the most government driven, the most extreme in valuations," he said.
"Australia is the best country to weather this downturn and take advantage of the next boom.
"But this China bubble is going to back up on resource and commodity markets and it's going to hit Australia hard and I think it's going to cause your real estate to get hit and finally burst.
"I see real estate going down 60 to 65 per cent in the US, it's probably more like 30 to 50 per cent in Australia, but that's still enough for you to say: Hey why would you go buying real estate?"
Mr Dent argued buying property and expecting significant growth, 10 to 15 per cent, is crazy.
"Your real estate bubble is peaking ... and it is going to burst pretty substantially," he said.
"So why would you want to own real estate unless you're going to live in it forever or it's very important to your business.
"And why would you speculate on real estate, that's crazy at this point."