It has been a surprising start to the year for us, with massive numbers of appraisals and new listings, a slow but steady increase in buyer enquiry and a fair amount of time advising and reassuring vendors that things will get back on track. We have recorded 16 conditional sales in February but more than half of these rely on other sales chains to complete. 75% of these are under $1million.
Looking back REINZ reported 12 unconditional sales for January compared with 14 in December. This is a result of the typical lower levels of buyer activity in December leading up to the Xmas period. The outlook for February at the time of writing this report looks similar to January.
On the reverse side, the number of appraisals and new listings coming onto the market so far this year has broken all records. The paralysis caused by the uncertainty leading up to the election, the delays with forming a government and then Xmas has led to a herd of sellers coming to the market at once. Consequently, inventories have shot up with latest numbers approaching 400 listings on TradeMe up from 340 just a few months ago.
This is good news for buyers and sellers. It provides more choice for buyers than they had previously except in the lower price brackets where inventory is still slim. In time, it stimulates more activity across the whole market. More inventory and fewer buyers are shifting the higher price brackets firmly into the buyer’s market category. Inventories in the over $1million bracket would take over 2 years to clear at current sales volumes and motivated vendors with deadlines are seeing the writing on the wall and reducing asking prices to meet the market.
Our feeder markets are showing signs of an upswing with Auckland prices on the rise although sales volumes are still relatively low and 70% of auctions are being passed in. Most economists are predicting that the higher interest rate levels will continue to hold the New Zealand property market at bay for at least the next 6 months of 2024.
Our observations are that most of our buyers are planning to make a sideways move to Kerikeri from another area or wish to downsize. Only a few are looking to upsize. This is a sign of our economic times in New Zealand. At our current price level, even people from many Auckland suburbs find it hard to move here and release equity to live on as they have been able to in the past. Until the price differential widens again (either increases in our feeder markets or further decreases here) then some people may choose to move to more affordable parts of the country.
With the majority of buyers looking to downsize, the higher demand is for lower priced properties resulting in lower inventories and leaving high inventories in the higher brackets where demand is lower.
First time homebuyers remain mostly non-existent which ties to our higher than NZ average prices, lower than average wages and a challenging lending environment. Investors appear to be sitting on the fence although a few seasoned, cashed up investors are starting to play their cards as opportunities present themselves.
As reported in December, much of our sales activity depends on stimulus from Auckland and other centres. Usually a major shift in these markets takes 3 to 6 months to impact on ours. We watch with interest as these markets change over coming months.