Price growth in Melbourne and Sydney is not sustainable

Price growth in Melbourne and Sydney is not sustainable
Michael MatusikDecember 7, 2020

I must be missing something here.  I have been told that I am slow.

But for the life of me I cannot see how the recent price growth in Sydney and Melbourne (up 15% and 12% respectively over the last 12 months) is anywhere near sustainable.

Nor can I see how the median Australian house price (which apparently is $535,000) is just over four times the disposable average family household income.  That would mean that on a gross basis, the average Aussie family earns about $175,000 each year.

Hmmm, something must be amiss.

Experiment

Each article i write is kind of like an experiment.  Topics are chosen often because the common rhetoric doesn’t seem to add up.  Sometimes they get picked because I like to disagree.  Many more are actually written than published.

In most cases we go back to basics – “explain it to me like I was a five year old” – it worked for Denzel Washington in the movie, Philadelphia, and it works for us too.

So in this regard we did the following:

  • Went to the 2011 Census for each capital city and found the median family household income

  • Worked out – via average weekly earnings – which are updated by state/territory twice each year –how much, by proxy, family incomes may have risen since the last census.  There was a big variation between each city.

  • Determined disposable income (gross wages minus tax) using an up-to-date (2013/14) online calculator.

  • Recorded dwelling prices by capital for all dwellings; houses and attached product according to the latest release from RP Data.

  • Used AFG’s mortgage index to determine the average loan to value ratio for each state/territory.  Overall, the average equity is 32% on recent home loans according to AFG.

  • Applied a basic online mortgage calculator using a principal and interest loan; 30 year time frame and 5.95% variable interest rate (the average rate, according to the RBA). 

Our aim here is to find out two things:

  • The current dwelling price to income ratio for each capital, and

  • The proportion of disposable family income needed to pay the average mortgage in each city today. 

Now that sounds pretty logical, right?  No silly things like prices versus nominal GPD; nor is income determined by national accounts.  Just a simple comparison between what we say we earn; what we have left over, in theory at least (as day to day expenses just seem to be escalating far beyond CPI), after tax; and how much a dwelling costs to buy.  Importantly, it is measured on a city by city basis.

So here are the results – all for March 2014.

Sydney 

Median dwelling price

$762,000

Median detached house price

$818,000

Median attached dwelling price

$585,000

 

 

Median family household income

$97,500

Median disposable household income

$72,000

 

 

Ratio - dwelling price to disposable income

10.6

Ratio - house price to dis. income

11.4

Ratio – attached price to dis. income

8.1

 

 

% dis, income needed to buy dwelling

50%

% dis, income needed to buy house

54%

% dis, income needed to buy attached

38%

Houses are very overpriced; attached property is heading that way.

Melbourne

Median dwelling price

$669,000

Median detached house price

$699,000

Median attached dwelling price

$498,000

 

 

Median family household income

$93,500

Median disposable household income

$69,500

 

 

Ratio - dwelling price to disposable income

9.6

Ratio - house price to dis. income

10.1

Ratio – attached price to dis. income

7.2

 

 

% dis, income needed to buy dwelling

50%

% dis, income needed to buy house

52%

% dis, income needed to buy attached

37%

Like Sydney, Melbourne’s houses are very expensive and attached property is heading the same way.

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Michael Matusik

Michael Matusik is the founder of Matusik Property Insights, which has helped over 550 new residential projects come to fruition.

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