Home The week ahead: Halting Aussie housing poses a recovery problem – Westpac
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The week ahead: Halting Aussie housing poses a recovery problem – Westpac

Analysts from Westpac have cautionary words about this week’s upcoming Aussie housing signals, the EU’s Brexit Summit, as well as key flash PMI’s for Japan, Europe, and the US.

Key quotes

  • Mixed signals on housing but adjustment  process seems likely to have further to run

The Westpac Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment  rose 2.8% to 104.3 in November from 101.5 in October.  That was a surprisingly strong result. In particular, respondents  are much more positive about their own finances. That is despite  consistent reports around weakness in the housing markets  in the major capitals and the sharp falls in the equity market  through October.

The Westpac Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment  rose 2.8% to 104.3 in November from 101.5 in October.  That was a surprisingly strong result. In particular, respondents  are much more positive about their own finances. That is despite  consistent reports around weakness in the housing markets  in the major capitals and the sharp falls in the equity market  through October.

Consumer expectations for house prices posted another fall in  November. The Westpac Melbourne Institute Index of House  Price Expectations fell 2.3% to 99 – on par with the weakest  read we have ever seen on this index, when it was first compiled  back in May 2009.  

In this cycle, Sydney dwelling prices have already fallen by 8.7%  while prices in Melbourne are down by 5.1%.  New lending for housing is also contracting. New lending for  “upgraders” (owner occupiers excluding First Home Buyers) has  fallen by 13.2% over the last year (October 2017 to September  2018) but more significantly has fallen by 10.7% in the two  months to September.

 Banks have tightened credit conditions such that when  demand for credit recovers (as may be implied by the “Time to  Buy” index for NSW) it may not be as simply accommodated as  was the case in those previous periods. This will complicate the usual adjustment process. Markets  stabilise when prospective buyers feel encouraged to re-enter  the market. Affordability returning to equilibrium and price  expectations turning positive are generally the triggers for  markets to recover. The “Time to Buy” index for NSW is sending  an encouraging early signal but if prospective buyers are unable to secure adequate funding to enter the market, the move to the  new equilibrium may be more extended.  In summary it is apparent that this cycle is quite different to the  two previous down cycles for dwelling prices. Affordability is  more stretched and sources of adjustment are more restricted.  Furthermore, credit conditions indicate that a recovery in  affordability and demand may not be accommodated through  credit supply in the same way we saw in previous cycles.  

  • The week that was

Labour market data provided two contrasting perspectives on Australia’s economy this week. Meanwhile, consumer sentiment  strengthened, and business conditions remained above average.  Following last month’s 5.0% unemployment rate, a level  historically regarded as consistent with full employment, the  Australian labour force survey for October was keenly awaited.  It certainly did not disappoint, with the unemployment rate  remaining at 5.0% despite a partial reversal of the 0.2ppt  decline in participation seen in September.

Moving offshore, data released this week for China points  to the investment trend having troughed. That said, the  acceleration in activity will be slow in coming amid headwinds  from ongoing structural change in the finance sector and, to a  lesser extent, uncertainty associated with trade policy. On that  front, murmurs of the US’ being willing to compromise with  China on trade bolstered markets overnight.

For the US, data has been light but broadly supportive of the ongoing robust, non-inflationary uptrend in activity continuing, with the CPI benign in October (annual core inflation at 2.1%yr) as retail sales beat expectations (0.8%).  Chair Powell again showed  confidence in the US economy and the outlook this week  despite weakening residential investment and uncertainty over  the lasting benefit of fiscal policy to growth. Recent market  volatility is not a material concern, nor are global risks and trade  tensions. But all are being watched closely.  

For Europe (and the UK), Brexit has again been the focus. A  brief respite from Brexit uncertainty was seen mid-week as the  UK Cabinet rubber stamped a transition deal agreed by UK and  European negotiators. But multiple ministerial resignations the  day after consequently put Prime Minister May’s position and  the deal in jeopardy. It is not at all clear if the current deal will  remain let alone what a replacement deal might look like.  

 

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