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Property values keep rising, with gains beyond Auck, Chch

New Zealand property values continued to rise in January, though those gains are extending beyond Auckland and Christchurch, where limited supply has led to inflated sale prices.

National property values rose 1.5 percent in the three months ended January 31 to $426,452 and are up 6.2 percent over the past year, according to state valuer Quotable Value. That is the same rolling three-monthly pace of growth from December, and up from the 5.7 percent annual increase.

Property values are now 2.6 percent above the last peak in late 2007.

The gains were not limited to Auckland and Christchurch, where an undersupply of housing has caused values to grow at a faster rate than the rest of the nation.

"Over the last month or two, values have also begun rising again in most other main cities and provincial centres," QV research director Jonno Ingerson says in a statement. "While the rate of value increase is not as fast as Auckland and Canterbury, it does signal an increase in confidence across most of the country."

The prospect of a ballooning housing market growing beyond the country's two biggest centres will come under scrutiny from the Reserve Bank, which has voiced its discomfort at the level of house prices.

Governor Graeme Wheeler has been under increasing pressure to take the heat out of the property market through the use of macro-prudential tools such as loan-to-value ratios or increasing banks' capital ratio requirements, which lobbyists claim would also take pressure off interest rates and the currency.

Mr Ingerson says property prices are set to stay under pressure, with rising sales volumes leading to a lack of available houses for sale.

Auckland property values rose 3 percent in the rolling three-month period and were up 10 percent on an annual basis, while Christchurch values rose a quarterly 2.4 percent an annual 7.1 percent.

Hamilton property values increased 1 percent in the three months ended January 31, and were up 3.7 percent on the year, while Tauranga values were flat on a rolling three-month basis, and down 1 percent from a year ago.

Wellington property values increased 0.6 percent in the three months and up 1.8 percent on the year, while Dunedin gained 1.1 percent in the rolling period for a 2.7 percent annual gain.

(BusinessDesk)

Comments and questions
8

What's the real relative values now, though, once inflation over the period is taken into account?

Where are you, Mr Wheeler?

What's the inflation adjusted relative prices between 2007 and now please? Surely property is still down in real terms even with these nominal increases?

This is what happens when you flood the market with ultra-cheap money by holding interest rates at record lows.

Meanwhile, Wheeler is asleep at the wheel.

Just waiting for this bubble to burst when interest rates rise.

Reserve bank needs to take action to control the excessive demand by borrowers which will inevitably promote the boom/bust cycle that has caused us so much economic pain.
Willie Getonwithit

The Greens need to call for an inquiry into how they can jaw-bone the market down, so they won't need to print too much money to help Shearer/Labour build his 50sq m high-rise cattle pen fairytales he's trying to sell NZ Inc.

This "free-market" economy no one can seem to do anything about needs plenty more red-tape to truss it up so it can't move... and Shearer and Norman will have the property market behaving like a playful but naughty dominatrix that just needs restraining and a good spanking to get it into line...

Clearly caused by council development charges. Not.