How the Ipswich region stacks up: Simon Pressley

How the Ipswich region stacks up: Simon Pressley
Simon PressleyDecember 7, 2020

GUEST OBSERVATION

Ipswich has one of the fastest growing populations in Australia over the last decade.

When a few marketing jazz words are combined with a low entry price and above-average rental yields, it’s never been difficult for the so-called property guru to attract property investors to Ipswich. But does the region really stack up?

With its vast amounts of developable, cheap land available, Ipswich plays a key role in the state government’s strategy to try and direct population growth away from the coast.

Population Growth

2003-2013

2008-2013

 

(10yrs)

(Post-GFC)

Australia

1.7%

1.8%

Queensland

2.4%

2.1%

Ipswich

4.2%

3.7%

The impact of a relatively large volume of sales of new properties in a developing region creates a distortion between the data for changes in median property values and the real change in property values.

As the graphic below illustrates, dwelling supply and population growth have kept pace with each other. In spite of the regular hotspot rhetoric that Ipswich cops from time to time, its property market performance has in fact been quite underwhelming.

How the Ipswich region stacks up: Simon Pressley

With a traditional blue-collar demographic, successive state governments and the Ipswich City Council have had to work hard to create sufficient jobs for its growing population.

The award-winning Springfield masterplanned community has been developed over the last decade as a satellite city - Brisbane’s version of Parramatta.

How the Ipswich region stacks up: Simon Pressley

Already with a new hospital, business park, and railway line, Springfield currently has several good projects in the pipeline. These include a $50 million expansion of the University of Southern Queensland, $70 million headquarters for GE, $80 million Mater hospital, $100 million Brookwater resort and plans to further extend the Orion shopping centre.

The existing Amberley RAAF base has also been spoken about as an anchor tenant for a potential aeronautical precinct.

Investors could do worse than Ipswich, although it is far from our first preference. With so much land flagged for development, expect to see significant new supply, mostly concentrated around Springfield, Ripley, and Redbank Plains.

There is currently in the vicinity of $275 million in house and land packages currently under construction. The Springfield Land Corporation has also just announced a proposal to develop 10,000 new apartments.

Simon Pressley is managing director of Propertyology, a full-time property market analyst, accredited property investment adviser, and Australia’s (REIA) Buyer’s Agent of the Year (2012+2013+2014).

Picture courtesy of Clarebear/ CC BY-SA 3.0.

 

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