Australians’ private debt has soared to 187 per cent of their income. Debt is up from about 70 per cent in the early 1990s.
The jobless rate rose for the second straight month in December to 5.8 per cent, and underemployment, the number of workers wanting more hours, is near an all-time high. Wage growth is the lowest on record.
Australia has one of the world’s biggest property bubbles. In some sections of the country, prices are already under severe price pressure. The entire country will soon face that problem, at least in my opinion,
The Financial Review reports There’s $1 trillion of Australian Mortgages and Some Now Worry of What’s Next
The Reserve Bank of Australia frequently seeks feedback on the health of the economy. It might want to call the debt counsellors soon.
Homeowners, consumers and property investors around Australia are making more calls to financial helplines as three warning signs back up the spike in demand: mortgage arrears are creeping up, lenders’ bad debt provisions have increased and personal insolvencies are near an all-time high.
“It’s steadily out of control — I don’t know of too many financial counselling services where demand doesn’t exceed supply,” said Fiona Guthrie, chief executive officer of Financial Counselling Australia, who says the biggest increase in calls is from people suffering mortgage stress. “There are more people who have got mortgages that they can’t afford to pay.”
Australia’s households are among the world’s most-indebted after bingeing on more than $1 trillion of mortgages amid a housing boom that’s fizzled out in parts of the country, but still roaring in Sydney and Melbourne.
RBA governor Philip Lowe places financial stability at the forefront of monetary policy.
The concerns are understandable. Australians’ private debt has soared to 187 per cent of their income, from about 70 per cent in the early 1990s, encouraged by low interest rates. In a November speech, Lowe said that while most households are managing these levels of debt, many feel they are closer to their borrowing capacity than they once were.
Knocking out the wind
“There’s so much household debt that a couple of rate hikes here would completely knock the wind out of the housing market, and a lot of people would be impacted by it,” said Gareth Aird, economist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the nation’s largest lender. That’s partly why he doesn’t think the RBA will lift rates until 2018 at the earliest.
Lenders are watching these indicators as closely as the RBA. After a seven year bull-run, annual cash earnings at Australia’s big four banks fell last year for the first time since the financial crisis, said PricewaterhouseCoopers. At the same time, their bad debt expenses – which encompass both business and consumer lending – jumped 39 per cent to $5.1 billion, the highest since 2012.
But the hardest indicator to track may be borrowers worried about making their next repayment. Counsellors at the National Debt Helpline deal with such problems and are now even getting calls from property investors, said Guthrie. In the last quarter of 2016, phone calls to the service jumped 12 per cent on the previous year to an average 11,079 per month, she said. That’s double the rate of increase of the same period a year earlier.
Time to panic?
It’s not time to panic. Banks’ losses still remain small by historical standards and are largely confined to mining areas, according to PwC. Some 77 per cent of customers at Commonwealth Bank were ahead on their mortgage payments as at June; the lender is likely to update those figures next week. The RBA also noted in November that borrowers have set aside funds tied to their mortgages equivalent to 17 per cent of outstanding balances.
Key Phrase: “Not Time To Panic”
The #1 rule of panic is simple: Panic before everyone else does.
Those thinking of buying a house in Australia now are out of their freaking minds. Yes, I have been saying this for quite some time. And many can point to profits. But those profits are all on paper. Try selling. It’s impossible for everyone to cash out.
Those who place their homes on the market now, with aggressive below-market pricing, will likely be able to find suckers. Those who think it’s too early to panic will likely to be trapped down the road.
Home are illiquid. It’s seldom too early to panic.
When selling real estate, it’s a catastrophe to panic after the panic has already started.
Mike “Mish” Shedlock
Iceland in 16 Days: Day 11, Westfjords, Ísafjörður Sunrise
https://mishmoments.com/2017/02/08/iceland-in-16-days-day-11-westfjords-isafjordur/
Hi Mish – Great pictures. I am sure that they do not do justice to the scenery there.
Quick question. How big is the language barrier in Iceland for visiting tourists? Iceland is a place that I would like to visit in the future so I have always wondered about the impact of language.
Icelandic people are usually quite fluent in english so visiting is not a problem.
English is taught at schools as part of the regular school curriculum.
Same situation exists also in Norway, Finland and Sweden.
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Sweden is to be avoided completely however because of their insane immigration and asylum policies and complete incompetence and fecklessness of swedish police.
Stockholm, Malmo and Gothenburg and several smaller cities have lots of problems.
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In Norway care should be taken in Oslo during evenings and nights because there are many attacks against women by immigrants who came using the asylum system to get refugee status based on a story they invented because they wanted to get on welfare.
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In Finland care should be taken in Helsinki during evenings and nights because there are many attacks against women by immigrants who came using the asylum system to get refugee status based on a story they invented because they wanted to get on welfare.
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In Denmark some areas of Copenhagen are best avoided because concentration of problematic immigrants who came through the asylum system.
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Now all countries are tightening policies but Denmark has tightened the most.
Thank you
I live in Sweden and sure, there are problem areas especially in Malmö, but I don’t know anyone or know OF anyone being assaulted other than the ones you read about in the papers.
Rather than worry about immigrants who truthfully are poor REFUGEES with no home, no money and no hope, we actually need to worry about posters on this and other boards who call themselves “anonymous”!
Icelandic people are usually quite fluent in english so visiting is not a problem.
English is taught at schools as part of the regular school curriculum.
Same situation exists also in Norway, Finland and Sweden.
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Sweden is to be avoided completely however because of their insane immigration and asylum policies and complete incompetence and fecklessness of swedish police.
Stockholm, Malmo and Gothenburg and several smaller cities have lots of problems.
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In Norway care should be taken in Oslo during evenings and nights because there are many attacks against women by immigrants who came using the asylum system to get refugee status based on a story they invented because they wanted to get on welfare.
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In Finland care should be taken in Helsinki during evenings and nights because there are many attacks against women by immigrants who came using the asylum system to get refugee status based on a story they invented because they wanted to get on welfare.
.
In Denmark some areas of Copenhagen are best avoided because concentration of problematic immigrants who came through the asylum system.
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Now all countries are tightening policies but Denmark has tightened the most.
yes, true ” impossible for everyone to cash out “. But not impossible for everyone to keep re-financial and borrowing as long as its supported by Govt policy. High Immigration, low interests, tax incentives endless foreign investors all work together to keep the ponzi afloat.
If it doesnt pop soon, the high housing prices and massive debt load will become such a drag on the economy, that the lack of income growth will sap confidence.
Like any long lasting bubble, the property obsession has sucked resouces from productive pursuits , also adding to fragility of the economy.
Aust has high taxes, pathetic leaders, high wellfare and rellies of a continual stream of foreign investors and foreign lenders and high immigration to balance the books.
This all comes at a massive cost to lifestyle eg congested roads schools and hospitals.
As middle class families get pushed further and further out of the city to the suburbs , and must endure longer and longer commute times.
Aust has become an incredable deskilled lazy population that has become totally reliant on others ( foreigners ) to maintain their current lifestyles. Like their politicans, nobody seems to care about their future lifestyles
Hope you are right. JUst sold my house in Adelaide unconditional cash
offer and got more than I wanted to a local builder who will knock it down and put two monstrosities on it. he is letting us rent it back until November so my daughter can finish school. I am sure he thinks it is money in the bank for him and he may be right but prices here for land are ridiculous
To add a little perspective, Adelaide is one of the most affordable metropolitan areas in Australia. My house in Adelaide just sold for 1130 AUD per Sqm. With demolition costs etc to go on top.
When they say 187% of income, is that gross income or after tax?
In Norway its 230% of disposable income, i.e. after tax.
And lets not be fooled by average numbers. The top 20% in Norway has debt burdens of 5-10 times disposable income. 10% cannot tackle a 1% rate hike.
And this is a welfare state. Problem is that an increasing numbers are taking advantage of the welfare and an decreasing number is contributing.
And it’s all paid for by oil revenues, which are DROPPING!
It’s pretty much the same everywhere if it is any consolation. This article could apply to any “developed” country. As long as you have the mainstream media to calm the nerves, there is no reason to REALLY panic.
Supposedly free-market republican Rand Paul has just drafted a bill which will make healthcare companies including hospitals, doctors,health insurance companies and drug companies EXEMPT from ANTI-TRUST LAWS meaning Rand Paul is a total FRAUD as a supposed free-market republican and Rand Paul wants to legalize the restraint of trade and anti-competitive practices many hospitals, doctors offices, drug companies and health insurance companies currently practice and what is driving the medical costs in US to unbelievable high levels BECAUSE there is NO local competition in hospitals and doctors offices and medical imaging thanks to ineffective government policies limiting hospital placement and medical imaging center placement and doctors office placement and allowing the sale of healthcare without predetermined pricing and same prices for everyone meaning that currently hospitals and doctors offices are breaking laws by not posting prices and socking customers with outrageously high prices after the fact and having some pay 10x-20x-30x for the same products and services depending on health insurance providers or lack of one.
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Rand Paul will destroy all his credibility and his political career and the Paul name in politics and Rand will also DESTROY the legacy of Ron Paul if Rand Paul’s ANTI-COMPETITIVE and ANTI-FREE MARKET legislation giving hospitals, doctors offices , health insurers and drug companies EXEMPTION from anti-trust laws on the books becomes law.
Rand Paul wants it to be LEGAL for hospitals and doctors offices and drug companies and healthcare insurers to FINANCIALLY DESTROY americans.
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Rand Paul’s “Obamacare Replacement Act” is a FRAUD upon americans that will make the financial destruction of americans in the hands of hospital companies, doctors offices, drug companies and health insurers WORSE by EXEMPTING them from ANTI-TRUST LAWS.
Rand Paul’s MIDDLE-FINGER to free markets and market competition:
“(a) Application of the Federal Antitrust Laws to Health Care
Professionals Negotiating With Health Plans.–
(1) In general.–Any health care professionals who are
engaged in negotiations with a health plan regarding the terms
of any contract under which the professionals provide health
care items or services for which benefits are provided under
such plan shall, in connection with such negotiations, be
EXEMPT from the FEDERAL ANTI-TRUST LAWS.”
https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/222/text
Rand Paul’s phone numbers:
DC office:
202-224-4343
Kentucky office:
270-782-8303
email form:
https://www.paul.senate.gov/connect/email-rand
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Rand Paul’s law will make the whole healthcare industry EXEMPT from ANTI-TRUST LAWS which means Rand Paul wants it to become fully LEGAL without a question for hospitals to ROB someone 30 times the cost of a medical procedure that someone else pays.
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The problems in healthcare are caused by:
1.no listed prices for services provided before providing said services so the free market is NOT ALLOWED to work on healthcare.
2.variable pricing up to over 30+ times for the same procedure for some people while some people pay 1/30th of that.
3. illegal immigrants pay NOTHING thereby hospitals re-coup all the costs they cause from americans needing healthcare.
4. politicians and bureaucrats stop free market competition in that one can not setup a cheap price MRI-scan center next to a hospital that is charging 30 times cost for a MRI-scan etc.
5. doctor lobby keeps the amount of doctors that are trained too small for the demand making doctors earn 250k when with more doctors being trained they would earn only 150k
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FREE MARKETS will solve the problems in healthcare if FREE MARKETS are allowed to work and basically ALL the problems in healthcare come from hospitals, doctors offices and drug companies CHARGING TOO MUCH because there is no free market.
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Rand Paul is destroying his fathers legacy and his own political career…
You are confusing free markets with competitive markets. Free markets are about individual liberty. If hospitals and doctors want to join together to collude to hide pricing so consumers can’t shop on price, it is their liberty to do so.
Competitive markets require big goobermint to step in and create and enforce anti-trust laws and such. Is that really a world worth living in?
You are seriously confused.
car garage’s can not conspire together to not give prices until after fixing your car and car garage’s can not conspire together to charge 5000 dollars for changing tires and car garage’s can not conspire together with government bureaucrats to keep new car garage’s from starting a car fixing business near them to protect their ability to charge outrageous amounts.
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Hospitals,doctors offices, drug companies, health insurers and medical imaging companies are DOING all the things that are forbidden from car garage’s by current anti-trust laws and since there is currently NO EXEMPTION for them from anti-trust laws it means that their trust like behavior is ILLEGAL and the only reason they are able to get away with it is their lobbying dollars to the wh*res known as senators and congressmen.
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Rand Paul’s anti-american and anti-free-market legislation would make currently ILLEGAL behavior by healthcare industry legal so Rand Paul wants to allow healthcare industry to ROB americans even more than they are doing now and Rand Paul wants to guarantee that healthcare industry’s ROBBING of americans can continue forever.
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Healthcare needs free markets to fix the issues destroying americans lives.
If there was free competition and free markets in healthcare there would be NO NEED for Obamacare.
Yes
Anyone who has a somewhat elective procedure should seriously think about going offshore to India or Thailand. World Class treatment plus a luxury hotel stay for 20% of the price here
Currently doctors are told what they will be paid by monopolistic insurers/hospital groups. Take it or leave it. No market. He is trying to allow them to bargain like nurses. Better to go after the existing monopoly then allow collective bargaining by doctors but doctors/patients/tax payers are being screwed by all the federally subsidized healthcare monopolies, insurance, pharma, medical equipment.
Rand Paul – another highly paid lobbyist whore masquerading as an elected representative of the people.
We can all see the problem. And we all know the solution.
Anti-trust laws are a bad idea as it is the government that enforces them. Monopolies only come into being when they are sanctioned by government. The government prevents competition in numerous ways. If you want more competition, get rid of the US government.
Agreed. And get rid of the worst monopoly of all: the sole proprietorship of objects (land, resources, etc…). All enforced by big goobermint.
I’ve long believed that monopolies, in a truly free market economy, could only exist temporarily.
Was in Oz at length in ’11-12. Overbuilding in evidence nearly everywhere in W.A. Truck drivers making $120-150K (Aus) in the Kimberley region, coming back to the Perth-to-Bunbery/Busselton corridor, their 4th week off, building $1-2M homes on the water with their boats tied up out front. China carried a lot of this with the commodity boom.
Some of us worry, some of us don’t. It seems unbelievable the housing boom is still growing and the median price of a house in Sydney is about $A750,000, the average across all 500 suburbs. Gen x and Y are shut out of the market unless family can help. But Sydney is well short of it’s housing needs so the growth keeps growing.
The median is $995,000 in Sydney (down 1.5% over the past quarter so prices may have peaked). My daughter lives in a lower (much lower) class suburb (Mt Druitt) and her house cost $600,000. Nothing in my suburb under $750,000 as the land alone is worth more and it is a typical working class suburb. Saw an ad last week for new house/land packages in Marsden Park (a long commute from everywhere) starting from $650,000 and they would be duplex type places with back yards smaller than my bedroom. Stupid government keeps importing more people to keep the “growth and development” going and want to add another million over 10 years only now I see traffic jams at 5.30am and the station I get off at just had about $200 million spent on it yet still has overcrowding problems in peak hours. What will it be like in 10 years I shudder to think.
$600K for a house in Mt Druitt !!!!!!!!!!!! Holy S*** and people think it is not a bubble!
“But Sydney is well short of it’s housing needs so the growth keeps growing.”
Everywhere will remain well short of housing needs up until almost full demographic extinction (Japanese is halfway extinct already, and Tokyo still doesn’t have anything resembling houses priced around their construction cost, 25 years after the policy to bail out construction lenders on the back of all future generations (who couldn’t “vote” as they weren’t born) were enacted.) Simply because banning people from building new houses where they want to live and can find jobs, is the only way the banksters can keep the “value” of their collateral up.
Unfortunately, the whole “ownership society” nonsense, has recruited a substantial share of people who ought to know better, into a position where all they do is keep rationalizing their own cheering for the same restrictions, which will forever keep most people in thrall to to banksters for the “privilege” of wasting their whole life in traffic jams back and forth to shacks in distant slums.
The housing rackets are no, as in literally,100%, no, different from how the car markets would be, if all those who happened to own a car in 1920, got to decide whether anyone else were allowed to build more of them. Which they would not, since I’m sure it’s nice to face no traffic jams, and an ever appreciating “resale value” for your car, since the only way to get a car, was to get it from you.
@ejhr2015
If you are arguing that the boom will continue because there is a housing ‘shortage’ then you are naive. The ‘real’ demand for Ferraris is substantially higher than ‘actual’ sales but the sales numbers are restricted because of the cost.
When people make this retarded argument about ‘shortages’ (some of the dumber elements of the media do it all the time) they forget that affordability is a factor. Wages in Australia are stagnant (and have been for several years) and unless they go up in line with house prices the bubble will burst. It’s that simple.
There are more cranes building apartments in Melbourne and Sydney than there are in all the major cities of North America.
No bubble here.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-10-21/real-estate-warning-more-cranes-in-australia-than-us/7954108
aren’t cranes migratory, left north america for sunny Oz in the winter
Bankers confiscate goods from the people via fractional reserve, and lend them back their own goods. The confiscation process produces inflation and mania that misallocates capital, eventually producing a future banana republic economy. The average person continues to move slowly backward.
No wonder our ancestors used a gold standard to protect themselves.
The 1950’s through the 1990’s was the greatest era of wealth creation in US history. I’d suggest the gold standard has little to do with folks moving slowly backward.
You do realize the world was on a quasi gold standard until Nixon closed the gold window in ’71 I hope. As for the ’90’s; I hope you remember that loud POP in 2000. How do you actually measure wealth, anyway, without a stable base to measure against? The dollar itself was actually defined as a particular weight of gold, IIRC.
Real wages for most peaked pretty shortly after Nixon went full fiat. While debts have gone through the roof. If you subtract the total systemic debt added from pretty much any metric of “wealth created” since the mid 70s, there’s not that left.
It’s easy to simulate “wealth creation”, when all you do is pay with IOUs, and your measuring stick is distorted by being not only in a make belief fiat currency, but in addition subject too all manners of distortions like “hedonic adjustments”, and other arbitrariness.
Per all the harder to fudge metrics, specifically energy consumption, 1960s is largely the peak. And the counted as “valuable” services that has been added since then, have large been of the ambulance chaser, bankster and real estate racket variety. Meaning,net negative, no matter how they are “accounted for” by institutions largely headed up by members of the above three groups.
Bigger! Stronger! More! Faster! Further! are pretty unfudgeable metrics of Wealthier. Something “Improved access to harass your ex by enriching ambulance chasers” simply are not.
America went from wilderness to planting a flag on the moon. That is the greatest creation of indisputable wealth in history.
Then, America went off the Gold standard, and started borrowing money to sue each other, and pretend the exact same shack somehow “grows in value” (as in creates wealth….) as it sits there and decays.
+1000
Genworth (Australia) Mortgage Insurance shares get dumped today after reporting 10% fall in profit due to a 20% increase in mortgage defaults. Expects losses to mount.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-02-08/genworth-mortgage-australia-sold-off-as-2016-profit-drops/8251072
Is Genworth the Countrywide of Australia?
McGrath Limlited, (Australia’s major Real Estate Agency) share price just hit new lows today. Share price now down to 69c from $1.80.
https://investor.mcgrath.com.au/Investor-Centre/?page=share-price-graph
Throw another debtor on the barbie, mate!
“The #1 rule of panic is simple: Panic before everyone else does.”
Wiser words have never been spoken.
The #2 rule of panic?
The early panic stricken must adamantly insist that what they’re doing should NOT be thought of as panic.
Nice. I like it!
As I see it, #1 rule of panic is “Don’t Panic” credit Douglas Adams; follow that with Mish’s “Panic Before Everyone Else Does.” as #2.
Rule #3.
Late panic shall never be admitted in order to save one’s appearance of making intelligent business decisions.
“The #1 rule of panic is simple: Panic before everyone else does.”
Wiser words have never been spoken.
Exactly. When did a politician or banker ever tell you when the right time to panic was?
I have a friend who lived in Las Vegas who got a new job in the Midwest right after the bubble popped. I told him to sell his house as soon as possible because pretty soon everyone in the city would be doing the same. But he couldn’t sell it because he thought the peak bubble price was what his house was “worth”, and at that point buyers thought differently. The same thing will happen to millions of Australians, because greed knows no boundaries.
The major problem for homeowners in OZ is that there are no 30 or 15 year mortgages like in the US. They are all short term ARMs that have to be continually rolled over.
It’s kind of like here in Canada. You have to wonder what the heck is going on when the average person can’t afford to buy a house and yet prices stay high. Where is the demand side of the equation coming from? Is it all foriegn money? Are people just willing to mortgage their lives away just to own real estate? I’m glad I bought 20 years ago because I personally don’t have the stomache for the level of debt people need to get into today to have a roof over their heads and renting is not the answer either. Vacnacy rates are near zero and rent = mortgage payment in a lot of areas. At some point something has to give. Either there will be rampant wage inflation to make houses affordable again or there will be a loud pop when the bubble bursts. I’m betting on inflation to hit big time in the 2020’s and I think so are a lot of new home buyers (more like praying I suppose).
It will not last. House prices will decline to the value before all this printed money started showing up. House prices will decline to about year 2000 levels.
Look at Japan, they peaked in 1992 and house prices are still 50% down today compared to 1992. Some folks are going to get clubbed to death like a baby seal. Bonds will evaporate and many folks will lose their pensions. There will be sovereign defaults and the state will turn on its own people to keep this socialist ponzi scheme alive. If your assets are not in your personal possession, they are not yours.
They’re just frontrunning the 3rd world hordes.
Selling seats in the 1st world to people in the 3rd world is the trade of the century.
Pretty sad
With all the capital controls in China preventing Australia benefiting from the Chinese deluge it will be interesting to see what happens to housing there. Australia is the canary in the coal mine.
Does anyone know the bankruptcy laws for Australia? Curious if the rate of bankruptcies is rising.
From the article above:
“… personal insolvencies are near an all-time high …”
There is severe mortgage stress with interest rates at all-time lows. Just 2 or 3 rate hikes and it’s all over.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEvAqZO-pgQ&t=836s
I sent this to a friend in Oz back on the 3/1/17
Go to 33.33 watch for about 5mins. See the blonde lady that has just signed up for her 3rd house and claims she is not good with numbers and she is into the banks for just over a million. When the herd \ retail investor is in; the market has topped. Bond yields are moving up so interest rates will not be far behind. Act accordingly.
Phil
Negative gearing and overseas “investment” (capital flight). That will keep this bubble going longer than doomsayers can remain patient.
Well when there is crisis there is opportunity.
What’s the opportunity here to capitalise on this bubble burst?
I once got an unsolicited call from an insurance firm that was selling all sorts, wages, lifestyle etc. and I took the opportunity to ask
‘Can you insure for decreasing house prices ‘
Laughter.
I have watched some busts and have not noticed anyone making profit on the way down.
But,,,here in this Brave New World, debt doesn’t matter don’tcha know?
As for panic,,,it seems these last 10 years have been a constant “Time to Panic,” according to these doomsday blogs. But, stopped clocks and all…….
One thing’s for sure. A lot of folks got left behind since 2009, now that equities, real estate etc. have doubled. Oh, and rents have held up well too. In the short run, there is volatility. In the long run, the three legs of wealth preservation prevail. Real Estate, Collectables and PM’s. Two steps forward, one step back.
But those who consistently panic, during that one step back, get left behind.
Could it be time to “panic” out of financials and into tangibles? The things that, unlike the dollar, have held value for hundreds of years?
Unless one is a hell of a trader, greed and fear can be very expensive investment motives.
True, debt is only a problem for the 99%…
The 1% knows the bigger the debt, the more control they have over the 99%.
Billionaire Buddies will gladly pick the winners & losers…
and shift any debt problems onto the public.
First of all, this is not a doomsday blog. It’s equally as hyperbolic to claim people get left behind as if there’s no hope for tomorrow.
They have plenty of other self inflicted issues down under also.
http://joannenova.com.au/2017/02/rolling-blackouts-in-sa-in-40c-heat/
Australia is sparsely populated – less than 20m people last time I checked. They’ll just have to allow in some immigrants from India or China. They could let those refugees stay but they probably wouldn’t generate much housing demand.
Countries like Australia and Canada have housing bubbles for many reasons, though central banks keeping rates artificially low are certainly part of the problem. Bubbles can end in two different ways: either they burst rapidly, or they deflate slowly.
I tend to think that these bubbles will slowly deflate for the following reasons;
1) central banks will keep rates low to prevent a bubble burst
2) lending standards and regulations in both countries require higher down payments and stable income in order to qualify for a mortgage (compared to the US before the bubble burst there)
3) mortgages in both countries are full-recourse, meaning you can’t just walk away; therefore you will give up your car, your toys, your lifestyle before you give up your house
4) people will even tap their retirement savings to rob from the future to keep their house and prevent bankruptcy
5) both countries encourage immigration (especially from those with wealth) and allow foreigners to buy housing and increase overall demand (at the expense of locals unfortunately)
The bubbles will burst rapidly given either of these reasons:
1) central banks allow rates to rise more than I expect
2) Trump starts a trade war, causing a global depression; then all the global bubbles burst (housing, stocks, bonds, etc.)
My wife and I were in Melbourne & Sydney on vacation in mid January for 10 days. The tour guides all talk about how the population is increasing due to immigration by 80,000 to 100,000 per year in each of these two big cities. There is no land left in these cities, yet that is where everyone wants to live. We spent time with a local family for several of the days, who live in a Sydney suburb. Every house near them that comes on the market is sold to investors, torn down, and a duplex erected on the same very small lot. I saw three like this in the small block where they lived.
Here is a link to a large article on housing in the Australian on Jan 27:
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/inquirer/the-politics-of-hot-housing-prices/news-story/52f7a4629cd79800000cf0430d9ae73a
We also visited Port Douglas which is a resort area north of Cairns. The housing market was weak there.
A witch’s brew of unscrupulous bankers and realtors, ‘hot’ foreign money, and politicians/regulators asleep at the wheel.
Around 2010 the economist Steve Keen was predicting a crash (aka US 2008 style) of the Australian property market. I held back buying a house thinking a collapse was imminent and I shall have my pick, maybe at 30-40% discount when it happens. Median house price in the suburb in 2010 was about $600K. The crash never came.The median price is now $1100K. Even if it should crash now, I doubt the median will drop to $600K, maybe 800-$900K if I am lucky. It is a big missed opportunity for me. Meanwhile, money in the bank has been growing at excruciating slow pace due the ultra low interest rates.
Sometimes it is best to go with your gut instinct.
It’s tough to watch, for sure, but the next global crisis is not likely to be the common garden variety. Japan’s own credit bust saw house prices fall over 60% and the next crisis could have an even more severe impact because it won’t be confined to one state.
Keeping your job is going to be the biggest challenge by far. Outside of mining, Australia’s main economic activity revolves around the housing bubble.
Reblogged this on sentinelblog.
Mish:
You are absolutely correct about your assessment of Aussie property bubble. My daughter and her husband have lived in Perth, WA since 2010. They each have well-paying jobs where they earn about $100k/AUS$ per year. Even with this income level they are NOT able or willing to buy a home. My wife ad I visited them in Sept 2016 and saw firsthand the “carnage” inflicted by the commodity bust. Mining revenues have collapsed. Home construction has ground to a halt in the Perth area. We met several people from the mining sector that have given up on finding a job in the industry and were contemplating a move to Melbourne or Sydney to “re-train”.
In short it is nothing less than a commodity “depression” brought on by a major slowdown in China’s growth story. The mood in Perth was notably dark, which is sad. It is a beautiful city sitting on the banks of the Swan River. I hope they can rebound but it does not look good right now. There is way too much emphasis on real estate and even the Prime Minister (Turnbull) seems to encourage a bit too much real estate speculation (since he made his fortune in real estate before entering politics). It is not looking good.
C.