Sat. Nov 9th, 2024
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Australian property prices have risen for the second month in a row, suggesting a downturn in the nation’s housing market has come to an end as interest rates appear to have stabilised.

CoreLogic data shows the median value of homes sold across the country increased by 0.5 per cent in April, and follows a 0.6 per cent increase in March.

The growth is largely from a 1.3 per cent increase in Sydney house prices, with the median property price sitting comfortably above $1 million — the only capital city in the country with a median price in the seven-figure range.

Next are the three largest capital cities of Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth, which all experienced monthly rises under 1 per cent.

Adelaide also reported a marginal increase, while the smaller capital cities of Hobart and Canberra recorded no increase to house prices, while Darwin’s median value fell by 1.2 per cent last month.

CoreLogic’s research director, Tim Lawless, said that, despite the divergence, the figures suggest Australia’s housing market downturn has passed.

“Not only are we seeing housing values stabilising or rising across most areas of the country, a number of other indicators are confirming the positive shift,” he said.

“Auction clearance rates are holding slightly above the long-run average, sentiment has lifted and home sales are trending around the previous five-year average.”

Mr Lawless said Sydney house prices, in particular, have rebounded strongly, increasing by 3 per cent since reaching a low in January.

CoreLogic’s figures have also been supported by PropTrack, a monitoring service owned by the REA Group.

PropTrack’s data shows national home prices increased in April, with Sydney’s housing market leading the recovery.

Mr Lawless said that, with the growing expectation that interest rates have stabilised — with both banks and financial markets widely expecting the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to keep rates on hold at Tuesday’s meeting — the short but sharp downturn has led to an increase in demand for housing.

“This could be contributing to a broader perception that the market has bottomed out, and for those attempting to time the market, that it is considered to be a good time to buy,” he said.

“As interest rates stabilise, there is a good chance consumer sentiment will improve, bolstering housing market activity from both a purchasing and a selling perspective.”

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