A Negative Spin on Property?

By Pete Wargent on 20 Aug 2013
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MSM Piles In

The mainstream media have latched onto the auction frenzy and have called that a property boom is at hand in the eastern states.

Meanwhile, more serious economists such as Bassanese at the AFR remain bullish house prices”, while experienced property market analyst Michael Matusik notes that Australia’s eastern states could see price growth of up to 25 per cent over the next 3 years. Over at Business Spectator, Robert Gottliebsen forecasts that Australia is heading for “the mother of all dwelling booms” caused by an imbalance between supply and demand.

That’s a fair amount of positive sentiment doing the rounds.

It’s no doubt confusing for new entrants to the property market, because on the flip side there continue to be negative angles reported too.

There’s an old saying in investment circles (which has been claimed as their own by a few people) that says: “a speculative bubble is a bull market which you don’t have a position in.”

There’s much more than a grain of truth in that. The overwhelming majority of those barracking the property market dynamics are either renters (who doubtless want prices to crash so that they can participate in the market themselves) or people making an easy dollar from selling stories on the existence of a bubble. This all makes logical sense and ’twas always thus: property price rises naturally seem unfair to those not participating in the upside, and that will never change.

There are several negative angles that get churned over.

One is that owning property is somehow vaguely unethical. Such articles can usually be identified by their not-so-subtle name-calling, with words like “amateur speculators”, “unsophisticated landlords”, “rent-seekers” and the old favourite “specufestors”, being lightly sprinkled in. Ideally, the words “greed” and “foreign buyers” should also feature. As a renter myself, I’m very glad that we have landlords to house us – a modern capitalist system would never work in any other way.

Articles continue to portray landlords as evil, making people homeless on a whim or turfing them out at the drop of a hat in a frivolous game of “eviction popcorn”:

“Young first-time buyers such as Naomi Jacobs in Newcastle finds herself more in a property nightmare than a property dream. “I’d love to buy a little house now,” she told me. She wants to have a family, and as the family gets bigger so she’d want a bigger house. That is the dream. Naomi is a science graduate, a science graduate with a job. But she can’t get a mortgage. She blames the buy-to-letters. “The smaller flats that first-time buyers would want are ideal for them to rent out,” she sighs. “But that’s the way it is these days. It’s slightly cruel when you think about it.”

On the face of it, this sounds bad and we are invited to be up in arms at the unfairness of it all, the angle being that an employed graduate can’t get a mortgage. But there’s no explanation as to why she can’t get a mortgage. Usually, that would only be because no deposit has been saved by the potential borrower. So is this an argument for a return to 100 per cent mortgages? Which, by the way, are the exact products that also get blamed for speculative activity and booming prices.

It’s a never-ending negative loop, of course.

The market commentary where I am at the moment in England has seamlessly shifted from a “devastating property market crash” to “a new property market bubble” in just a couple of short months. Literally only a few weeks ago there were cautionary tales that many remain in “negative equity after the crash” (this is indeed true in parts of the country) yet as prices are recovering strongly on a national basis it is already also being termed as a bubble. It’s apparently a crash and a bubble at the same time.

With the mass proliferation of online commentary, I suppose that this is a trend that won’t go away.

Prices are going up – this is bad because it must be a bubble. Prices could be falling so the whole world is doomed. Someone is in negative equity, so only fools would buy property. Interest rates are falling, this will cause a bubble. And now they’re rising, it’s unaffordable. Some people work in finance – this is also bad…

You only really have two choices when it comes to property: to complain about how unfair the world is or to do something about improving your own situation. If that sounds unsympathetic, it’s not mean to – it wasn’t so many years ago that I was 21 myself and as I entered the full-time workforce all the talk was of unfair and unsustainable London house prices.

Two Speeds

In my opinion, parts of the UK probably are likely heading for rapid property price appreciation, because after half a decade of stunted activity the supply of dwellings is essentially stuck and will not be able to meet demand.

Dwelling construction is at its lowest level in nearly a century, while interest rates are stuck at rock bottom and the population is growing rapidly in the south-east of England – migration and a baby boom have led Britain to have the fastest growing population in the EU. Over time, we’ll probably see longer mortgage periods of 30-40 years and higher prices.

But property markets in certain other parts of the country are struggling and will likely continue to do so. That’s why I’ve only ever advocated investing in south-east England, and London.

The media reports of an Australian property boom should also be viewed with caution. It’s illogical to talk about one property market. Even within cities and suburbs, some property types will appreciate strongly in value over the next decade, while some buyers will pay too much for the ‘wrong type’ of property and remain forever convinced that owning property is a dud idea.

It has to be said, for all the talk of a ‘boom’, Australian property price growth over the last few years has been relatively muted in plenty of areas, which after all, is the best long-term outcome for Australia – prices growing perhaps slightly slower than household incomes, effectively leading to a gradual improvement in affordability over time.

Some people will always do well out of property. Others will always get it wrong. Caveat emptor – buyer beware.

About the Author

Pete Wargent used a buy and hold approach to shares, index funds and investment properties to make his first million in his early 30s. He quit his full-time job at 33. He helps others do the same.

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