Showing posts with label rentals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rentals. Show all posts

16 July 2017

Taxing empty homes: a step towards affordable housing, but much more can be done


Vacant housing rates are rising in our major cities. Across Australia on census night, 11.2% of housing was recorded as unoccupied – a total of 1,089,165 dwellings. With housing affordability stress also intensifying, the moment for a push on empty property taxes looks to have arrived.

The 2016 Census showed empty property numbers up by 19% in Melbourne and 15% in Sydney over the past five years alone. Considering that thousands of people sleep rough – almost 7,000 on census night in 2011, more than 400 per night in Sydney in 2017 – and that hundreds of thousands face overcrowded homes or unaffordable rents, these seem like cruel and immoral revelations.

Public awareness of unused homes has been growing in Australia and globally. In LondonVancouver and elsewhere – just as in Sydney and Melbourne – the night-time spectacle of dark spaces in newly built “luxury towers” has triggered outrage.

This has struck a chord with the public not only because of its connotations of obscene wealth inequality and waste, but also because of the contended link to foreign ownership.

Early movers on vacancy tax

Against this backdrop, the Victorian state government has felt sufficiently emboldened to legislate an empty homes tax. Federally, the shadow treasurer, Chris Bowen, recently backed a standard vacant dwelling tax across all the nation’s major cities.

Similar measures have come into force in Vancouver and Paris. And Ontario’s provincial government recently granted Toronto new powers to tax empty properties.

Emulating Vancouver, Victoria’s tax is a 1% capital value charge on homes vacant for at least six months in a year. Curiously, though, it applies only in Melbourne’s inner and middle suburbs. And there are exceptions – if the property is a grossly under-used second home you pay only if you’re a foreigner.

Also, as in Vancouver, tax liability relies on self-reporting, which is seemingly a loophole. This might be less problematic if all owners were required to confirm their properties were occupied for at least six months of the past year. But that would be administratively cumbersome.

This highlights a broader “practicability challenge” for empty property taxes. For example, how do you define acceptable reasons for a property being empty?

In principle, such a tax should probably be limited to habitable dwellings. So, if you own a speculative vacancy, what do you do? Remove the kitchen sink to declare it unliveable?

How can we be sure a home is empty?

Lack of reliable data on empty homes is a major problem in Australia. Census figures are useful mainly because they indicate trends over time, but they substantially overstate the true number of long-term vacant habitable properties because they include temporarily empty dwellings (including second homes).

Using Victorian water records, Prosper Australia estimates about half of Melbourne’s census-recorded vacant properties are long-term “speculative vacancies”. That’s 82,000 homes.

Applying a similar “conversion factor” to Sydney’s census numbers would indicate around 68,000 speculative vacancies. Australia-wide, the Prosper Australia findings imply around 300,000 speculative vacancies – 3% of all housing. That’s equivalent to two years’ house building at current rates.

According to University of Queensland real estate economics expert Cameron Murray, a national tax that entirely eliminated this glut might moderate the price of housing by 1-2%. Therefore, although worthwhile, dealing with this element of our inefficient use of land and property would provide only a small easing of Australia’s broader affordability problem.

Making better use of a scarce resource

Taxing long-term empty properties is consistent with making more efficient use of our housing stock – a scarce resource. A big-picture implication is that tackling Australia’s housing stress shouldn’t be seen as purely about boosting new housing supply – as commonly portrayed by governments.

It should also be about making more efficient and equitable use of existing housing and housing-designated land.

Penalising empty dwellings is fine if it can be practicably achieved. That’s especially if the revenue is used to enhance the trivial amount of public funding going into building affordable rental housing in most of our states and territories.

But empty homes represent just a small element of our increasingly inefficient and wasteful use of housing and the increasingly unequal distribution of our national wealth.

One aspect of this is the under-utilisation of occupied housing. Australian Bureau of Statistics survey data show that, across Australia, more than a million homes (mainly owner-occupied) have three or more spare bedrooms. A comparison of the latest statistics (for 2013-14) with those for 2007-08 suggests this body of “grossly under-utilised” properties grew by more than 250,000 in the last six years.

Our tax system does nothing to discourage this increasingly wasteful use of housing. It’s arguably encouraged by the “tax on mobility” constituted by stamp duty and the exemption of the family home from the pension assets test.

A parallel issue is the speculative land banks owned by developers. The volume of development approvals far exceeds the amount of actual building. In the past year in Sydney, for example, 56,000 development approvals were granted – but only 38,000 homes were built.

In many cases, getting an approval is just part of land speculation. The owner then hoards the site until “market conditions are right” for on-selling as approved for development at a fat profit.

Properly addressing these issues calls for something much more ambitious than an empty property tax. The federal government should be encouraging all states and territories to follow the ACT’s lead by phasing in a broad-based land tax to replace stamp duty.

Such a tax will provide a stronger financial incentive to make effective use of land and property. The Grattan Institute estimates this switch would also “add up to A$9 billion annually to gross domestic product”. How much longer can we afford to ignore this obvious policy innovation?

Author: Hal Pawson, Associate Director - City Futures - Urban Policy and Strategy, City Futures Centre, Housing Policy and Practice, UNSW from


Further reading:

Smart city Townsville, creative city...whose city is it?

Real truth about negative gearing changes in Morisson federal budget 

Botched media coverage of Turnbull spin? Negative gearing in Federal Budget

First home buyers grant "pitted" by the Queensland Treasurer

Townsville sold out by PM Turnbull Smart City Deal

Guide to selling a luxury home

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12 May 2017

Turnbull federal budget could wipeout Townsville property owners


Image: Cartoonist, Dave Pope
The Turnbull-Morrison federal budget could wipe out many property owners who are hanging on to their investment properties in the Townsville district by the skin of their teeth, enduring sustained cash flow and equity declines over the past 5 years.

Not to mention the property owners (investors and owner-occupiers) whose fate has already been determined, falling victim to the steepest economic and property decline in financial terms in local recorded history.


Many are local residents that have lost their jobs or businesses, foreclosing with the banks or filing for bankruptcy. The highest occurrence of bankruptcy across the entire country has been experienced in Townsville.

Significant numbers of property owners are living from hand to mouth constrained by the debt imbalance. They are incurring losses from which negative gearing and a reliance on taxation refunds are their only salvation.

Despite the Property Council of Australia's (PCA) influence on this budget, the threat at the next election of a more extreme left-wing policy of reducing or eliminating negative gearing, has become a haunting possibility as the country strives for more revenues.

Green and left-wing extremism are likely to swing ordinary voters against the rise of Trumpism and Turnbullism. More anti-business and anti-corporate campaigns like Getup's malicious campaign against Adani coal is an ideology with heavy domestic and international support.

Although a seemingly senseless policy to any economist, a change of government, could be the armageddon for property owners if the Townsville economy continues to dance so far out-of-step with national economic trends and federal fiscal policy makers.

Also, Townsville governance organisations threaten the investment pipeline of the City in the short term, as the Turnbull government has a deep thirst for the "City Deal" mega data deposits from the Internet of Things (IoT) system. Under the contract by Mayor Jenny Hill, the "no data, no deal" is setting Townsville Enterprise up for restructuring or imminent redundancy.

The federal budget announcements targeting big-ticket infrastructure and taxation concessions using superannuation and negative gearing for managed funds to address housing affordability in Sydney and other capital cities is a dumb policy. This is really irresponsible on Townsville North Queensland given the recent and ongoing pain and suffering.

Despite Townsville Enterprise foolishly appealing for more new housing development to meet projected population growth, in other words increasing supply, North Queensland and Townsville districts do not need a housing affordability policy at the forefront of the public agenda when business investment and jobs are what is needed the most.

Instead, a more prudent priority for Townsville district is to seek microeconomic solutions such as the Tax Increment Financing (TIF) scheme, as proposed by the PCA. This is backed up by the Northern Australia Development Facility, with strong and robust relationships, with leading boards and executives of large enterprise both domestically and internationally.

Apart from births, migrations, and immigration, the focus on value-add industries securing property for development in Townsville's Council district, is Townsville's only leverage under the "City Deal" contract, to attract significant federal and state government investment.

The New Residential Land Sales and Supply chart clearly shows the surplus land stocks in Townsville districts.




In his address to the media, the Treasurer Scott Morrison said, "it's not a silver bullet – nor is it intended to be", referring to his federal budget and the media anticipating a fix all budget.

Ironically, this is exactly what this budget is. A silver bullet for property owners being put out of their misery if these measures strike to achieve more housing affordability in a market plagued by asset value declines.

Unemployment rates in Townsville are at 11 percent and the broader economy of regional Australia is hurting from the downturn in mining activity and substantial increases in energy prices.

The centre-point of the budget, being that it addresses housing affordability, could move the sentiments of distressed property owners and buyers to protest and disrupt the political will of what is perceived to be a puppet's play.

This federal budget reaffirms the concerns of local representatives that the Federal and State governments are capital city-centric. They are driven by votes instead of delivering "a fair go for all Australians", which Mr. Turnbull promised in his preamble to this budget.

The Turnbull-Morrison federal budget will go down as the most politically safe budget in coalition history. In fact, many commentators are saying it is a labor policy budget with terms like "centralist budget" and "not traditional liberal".

The Liberals are fully funding social programs such as the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) and increasing taxes on the banks.

The banks, of course, have already said they will pass on the cost increases to every mortgage holder in the country. As the big four banks have done in recent times, they are well within their rights to act independently to raise their interest rates and fees.

Once again for Townsville North Queensland, the people are being asked to pull up the smelly socks of bad government leadership. Meanwhile, a liberal government slips into their fresh uncharacteristically labor-like federal budget cotton socks to attract votes from the capital cities and the left-wing media establishment driven by ratings and polls.

Even financial and taxation professionals are labeling the budget as a "good strong budget" as there are no additional personal or small to medium size enterprise (SME) tax increases announced. Superannuation by and large has been untouched. 

Just as the people have grown to expect smoke and mirrors from a political funding announcement, the Turnbull-Morrison duo is being socially responsible and hitting the big end of town just like the Labor opposition policies were proposed to target.

By design or coincidentally, it is likely Bill Shorten has been taken out of play in this budget. Not only in policy terms. But it is effectively the "Bill Shorten execution budget".

Shorten's electability, not just as an opposition leader but Labor candidate in the seat of Maribynong, has taken a direct hit with 127 hectares of defense land in his own electorate in Victoria being made available for 6000 new affordable homes under this budget.

Is Mr. Shorten's political career finished? Mr. Turnbull would hope so, if the cold shoulder he gave him in front of the media the morning of the budget announcement is any indication.

Putting the political undertones aside, what if Sydney, Melbourne or Brisbane had an unemployment rate of 11 percent with a median house price of $337,000 for houses, and $272,000 for units? Would the federal budget be focused on housing affordability? Absolutely not!

The House and Unit Prices chart below demonstrates the decline of values and stable affordability environment in Townsville districts. 







Economic stimulation with tax breaks, grants, and infrastructure investment spending in the regions would be high on the agenda. But not this politically and socially sensitive government.

Its focus is on self-preservation. Obviously seeking to secure the next election with capital city and regional Victoria and New South Wales voters, who are set to benefit from the new $20 billion rail corridor from Melbourne to Brisbane.

With a consolation prize of relatively minor funding, allocated to repairs and maintenance to the Bruce Highway and disaster relief from cyclone Debbie, nothing positive from a Townsville perspective can be said about this budget.

When we look at the median property price for rentals in Townsville, it makes the federal budget's focus on affordable housing look like a joke.

For example, a three bedroom house in Townsville is currently being rented for $290 per week. This is a decrease in the housing price of 6.5% in the last 12 months, with the housing price already starting from a low base and dropping consistently from nearly $400 per week in 2012.

Considering the massive uncertainty in the superannuation sector over recent budgets, the mobile and rental accommodation being so affordable in regional Australia, the elderly are anticipated to snap up the $300,000 per person superannuation top-up option in this budget.

Once again in a Sydney context, this policy might make sense. But in Townsville, adding more supply to an already distressed housing market is like igniting high octane fuel in a fire of despair.

Unless local governments and marketing experts in Townsville and North Queensland target the elderly in the capital city markets by offering comparable or upsize value strategies such as a clean, affordable and healthy tree-change lifestyle, this budget measure is more likely to be detrimental to Townsville's property market.

The likely result is more housing supply as our elderly residents will seek to cash in. This breeds more unhappy owners because the further downward pressure will be put on median house prices.

In addition this budget also, the federal government will establish the housing finance corporation (HFC). From July 2018, the HFC will offer long-term, low-cost finance to community affordable housing providers. Investors are assured to get rental payments from the government with direct deductions from welfare payments transacted to investors.

It's the $1 billion National Housing Infrastructure Facility (NHIF) that is of particular concern in the hands of an inept local government being charged with developing business cases, to win funding and then administering the funds through community housing contractors.

Desperate for new home developments that attract increased revenues, council rates and economic stimulation, the NHIF program in Townsville will have Mayor Jenny Hill and Townsville Enterprise salivating at the mouth.

However, this social housing initiative will be disastrous for incumbent property owners in Townsville based on the accumulated evidence from the NRAS (National Rental Affordability Scheme). The now abolished Labor government NRAS program was a disaster back in 2013, its legacy is still being felt across the City.

Then, NRAS was the catalyst for the sustained fall in rental prices and subsequent fall in sale prices across the City. This combined with softer global commodity prices and carbon tax policies, Townsville's property economy has been impacted by catastrophic losses ever since.

Furthermore, affordable housing investors are being offered a possible 60% discount on capital gains if they build new housing projects with the condition of pricing the accommodation below market prices to low-income tenants managed by a community housing provider.

This is NRAS rebadged! All be it with a 40% less capital write-off, but with a more favourable incentive to control rental cash flow directly from welfare payments or employer direct contributions.

NRAS created a false economy and drove free market prices down just as the combined housing affordability initiatives are now likely to do.

The NHIF is based on the UK model aiming to assist local governments to develop new homes and apartment blocks. For Townsville North Queensland, the combined measures of NFIC and NFC are unfavorable with property prices already falling substantially over the past 4-5 years. NRAS Mark II is what this federal budget is delivering.

But that is not all, a separate Trust is being established by the federal government to encourage both foreign and domestic investors to invest in affordable housing in Australia. 

On one hand, foreign investors leaving properties vacant are being penalised $5,000 in capital gains in this budget, while on the other hand, the government opens up a larger pie for taxation write offs by directing their attention to public housing infrastructure.

In principle, this is a smart measure if it were applied to foreign investors directing their capital into regional manufacturing and new enterprise initiatives that create "value-add" to Townsville's enterprise infrastructure. 

Knowing the influence of Townsville's infamous property development moguls with land to burn (as shown in the New Residental Land Sales and Supply chart above), and a local council habitually grovelling for new subdivision applications, the depth and intensity of the housing affordability measures in the federal budget are bewildering.

To drive the nail in the coffin even further, property owners who claim travel expenses on their tax returns for inspecting, maintaining or collecting rent on their rental properties will no longer be allowed after July 2017.

Consider the fact that over 40% of Townsville's total housing supply are rental properties owned by investors, many travel to Townsville to check on their properties.

With current property yields declining and debt-to-equity ratios increasing, the federal budget is indirectly targeting the 3rd largest contributor to industry output in Townsville's $30 billion economy, this being the "Rental, Hiring and Real Estate" sector at 9.4% (Source: REMPLAN: Dec 2016). This is an industry contributing $2.8 billion per annum to the Townsville economy.

Under prudent management rationale, this budget would normally bring opposition kicking and screaming. But not a whisper from the incumbent Labor representatives in all local, state and federal seats across the Townsville districts.

Patricia O'Callaghan, Townsville Enterprise (TEL) CEO, confirmed in a statement to the Townsville Bulletin that the budget did not address any of the priority initiatives outlined by TEL in their pre-budget wish list. Yet she praised the Smart City Deal initiative and pledged to work with the federal government. 

The property owners and investors of Townsville North Queensland have been left with more questions than answers from this federal budget. With this fresh analysis undertaken by TREN, the property owners and stakeholders of Townsville North Queensland can forge a conclusive understanding of the impact from the federal budget on local real estate investors and owner-occupiers. 

Do you have an opinion about the federal budget? The TREN community wants to hear your story.

23 February 2017

New smoke alarm laws; Is your family safe?




From the 1st January 2017, new smoke alarm laws for domestic dwellings came into effect in Queensland that requires smoke alarms older than 10 years, or that are faulty, must be replaced with a photoelectric smoke alarm that complies with Australian Standard (AS) 3786-2014.

Dwellings that are hardwired must be replaced also with photoelectric smoke alarms under the same conditions if they are 10 years old or faulty.



Image: Thanks to rta.qld.gov.au

Existing ionisation smoke alarms are recommended for replacement as soon as possible. Although this is not mandatory until 2022 or it becomes faulty or exceeds the 10 year age condition. It is recommended by Fire and Emergency Services to replace Ionisation smoke alarms anyway.



Image: Thanks to rta.qld.gov.au

From 1st January 2022, ionisation smoke alarms must be replaced if the dwelling is being sold, leased or an existing lease is renewed and replaced with a photoelectric smoke alarm less than 10 years old and interconnected with every other smoke alarm in the dwelling. The alarms must be hardwired or powered by a non-removable 10-year battery.

Each storey or level of the dwelling, bedroom and each connecting hallway, or between bedrooms if there is no hallway must have an interconnected smoke alarm installed. Even if there is no bedroom on an extra storey or level, at least one smoke alarm must be installed in the most likely path of travel to exit the dwelling.

In addition to the Fire and Emergency Services requirements, rental property owner/managers are obligated to comply with the following requirements


Image: Thanks to rta.qld.gov.au

From January 2027, all private dwellings (yes your private home), townhouses, units and houses and investment properties must install interconnected photoelectric smoke alarms. If a hardwired smoke alarm cannot be installed, a non-removable 10-year battery smoke alarm interconnected must be installed to comply with Australian Standard (AS) 3786-2014.

If you are buying smoke alarms, there are some alarms that do not comply with Australian standards and there are alarms that standards certified recommended by Queensland Emergency Services and Standards Australia. The alarms to buy have these symbols or labels attached to the smoke alarm product.



Image: Queensland Fire and Emergency Services



The alarms to avoid have these symbols or labels attached to the products or nothing at all indicating the Australian Standards labels. Do not buy these because they are not compliant with Queensland law.



Image: Queensland Fire and Emergency Services

The placement of smoke alarms is also recommended along with having a fire escape plan in place to not only be alerted by the alarms but to respond to the emergency and exiting the property safely with your life and your loved ones.




Image: Queensland Fire and Emergency Services

Details of the placement and all other fire safety specifications can be found on the Queensland Fire and Emergency Services website. Here you can also find important information regarding smoke alarm safety; selling and leasing, new buildings or renovations and more detail about photoelectric smoke alarms.

Property owners and managers can find further information at the Residental Tenancy Authority website.

18 February 2017

National retailer embarrassed selling illegal smoke alarms in Townsville


Townsville residents are being warned about buying out of date smoke alarms from local retail and hardware outlets.

A local property owner reported purchasing non-complaint products from a local retailer this month, despite the fact new tougher smoke alarm laws were introduced in Queensland from the 1st January 2017.

Queensland's Minister for Fire and Emergency Services, the Hon. Bill Byrnes, said; "although residents would have up to 10 years to install the new alarms, everyone should take action to update their alarm system as soon as possible."

TREN can confirm that residents have been buying redundant smoke alarms from one of
Australia's largest hardware retailers as late as the first week in February 2017, over a month after the new laws were passed but at least 6 months since businesses had been warned of the impending changes.


One of the homeowners who contacted TREN about this public safety story presented one of the three alarms she purchased, and it clearly displays on the back side of the device, an expiry date of "12 July 2016". (see image below) The proof of purchase was also presented.

The smoke alarm was purchased from the retailer in February 2017 with "Quell Ionisation Smoke Alarm", "Manufactured in China for Chubb and Security Pty Ltd", who is based in New South Wales, clearly displayed on the back of the device.


Non-compliant ionisation smoke alarm
Image: TREN
When TREN alerted the retailer to the bungle a very pleasant and well-informed employee said: "this alarm is out of stock and non-compliant." When the employee was asked, "What about the other alarms that have already been installed?" The employee said: "they must be returned with your receipt and we'll give you a refund".

Many residents that have purchased the old ionisation alarms for their own homes reported that they feel confused, or completely not informed about what to look for when purchasing fire safety devices. This comes as the trend of online shopping is growing at a fast pace where cheap illegal products can be purchased very easily. No wonder consumers are confused and concerned about their safety and legal obligations.


Image: Queensland Fire and Emergency Services
Even when the labels on the ionisation smoke alarm in the above image are compared to the QFES website recommendations, it is understandable how residents could justify their confusion. The labelling of the smoke alarms is unclear and ambiguous based on the QFES recommendations on their website.

The yellow triangle hazard system on the homeowners' non-compliant alarm, which is not recommended, does not even appear on the QFES guidelines. Instead, a yellow square label is shown. And, even though the five tick Australia Standards symbol and Activefire Certified certification icon are shown on the QFES guidelines to be safe, the non-compliant ionisation alarm displays them.

Residents that are concerned and may not understand the new smoke alarm laws are advised to contact a smoke alarm installation professional, licensed electrical contractor or consult the Queensland Fire and Emergency Services website for further information. You can also contact the manufacturer with questions. For example, Quell has number to call 1800 654 435.

But with residents finding even the QFES website guidelines confusing, residents are encouraged to call a professional QFES "firefighter" to conduct a "Safehome" visit to receive advice about the best locations to place fire alarms and suggest other fire safety initiatives around the home.

To request a Safehome visit call 13QGOV or visit 

https://www.qfes.qld.gov.au/community-safety/freeprograms/Pages/safehome.aspx'




06 February 2017

Today's Reserve Bank Rate Decision

RBA Governer Philip Lowe, 2017
Image: Thanks to The New Daily

The financial markets and all economists had predicted the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) would keep the cash rate on hold and that's exactly what the RBA board did today.

The cash rate remains unchanged at 1.5 percent because of the strength in the national housing market over the second half of 2016. A consistent increase in investment projects since the rate cut in May and August last year was also a major factor in the RBA board retaining the current interest rate.

For Townsville, any further increase in the cash rate would be unwelcomed. Housing market conditions have been weak in North Queensland for the past 5 years. Darwin and Perth markets have also seen dwelling values drop since 2014, which as capital cities, were material factors in an unlikely rate increase.

It is likely the momentum in the housing market is one of the primary reasons why the Board did not jump on a rate decrease in an effort to stimulate spending and risk pushing inflation higher. Inflation has been tracking lower than the RBA's target range for just shy of 3 years.

CoreLogic reported; "capital city dwelling values were 10.7% higher over the past 12 months, which is a substantially higher growth rate than the 7.4% recorded over the same period a year ago." As a measure of contrast, the Townsville housing market saw a 8% decrease in dwelling values in the past 12 months.

Housing market conditions have pulled back on par with the previous rate reductions and the repetitive rise in investor involvement due to the accelerated pace of capital gains in the major capital cities. However, housing conditions vary considerably across the country. 

Mr Philip Lowe, Reserve Bank Governor, said; "Growth in rents is the lowest it's been in eastern markets for a couple of decades." Despite slowing rent growth, lending for investors has picked up. Lenders are cautious about lending in some sectors with a stiffening of supervisory measures being applied in these higher risk markets.

Still, the cost of debt remains historically low which should see demand for housing remaining strong from owner occupiers and investors, despite the cash rate staying on hold and some lenders making subtle increases to their mortgage rates.

Improvements in the global economy have provided a boost in commodity prices resulting in better than expected trade conditions for Australia. China's investment in infrastructure and construction contributed higher spending and stronger growth over the second half of 2016.

Financial markets have performed effectively. Most global stock markets have risen. Inflation is quite low and under control at 1 1/2 percent. This is expected to continue as labour costs will remain low moving forward.


Reserve Bank of Australia rate announcement


References:

Research Bank of Australia (RBA)
Corelogic
Rapid Realty Australia
Herron Todd White




Townsville Construction Sector in Caretaker Mode

Townsville's land development and construction sector are in a caretaker mode with residential building approvals tracking steadily from a low base of approximately 60 approvals per month. This is still 40 percent less than the 3rd quarter of 2011 at which time nearly 100 approvals per month were being delivered.

The residential building approval matrix is a pertinent chart in assessing the behaviour of not only the land development and construction sector in Townsville, but the projection of accommodation and capital prices downstream.

The incredible statistic in dwelling construction volumes is shown in this Residential Building Approval chart that shows building approvals continued for 4 years to 2015 while the number of people employed had been dropping since the 1st quarter of 2011.

And despite building approvals decreasing through 2015 to 2017, rental vacancy rates remained high around 5-7 percent and holiday occupancy rates remained low at 60 percent.


Bring this observation to the current day. Despite the North Queensland stadium being approved by all levels of government with negligible medium term economic benefit anticipated, the central city and Ross River precinct improvements are set to attract buyer interest as a catalyst for further unit development in the city.

From 2012 to 2016 unit development increased substantially despite the vacancy rate reaching 8-9 percent which is well above viable yield levels. Yet the construction sector will leverage the negligible economic impact from the nationally profiled stadium to seek further building approvals in the City precinct and meet the council's strategic target of having 30,000 residents in this precinct.

However, unit developments in the city precinct have been much higher in the past 5 years than any time in the history of Townsville. Yet the city precinct is still struggling to stimulate improved visitations to Flinders Street and an economic recovery.

This matrix demonstrates the influence of the land development and construction sectors in the Townsville economy because building approvals continued well above sustainable levels during the 2011 to 2015 years.

This may suggest construction approvals are politically-driven or influenced by the civil administration budget instead of open market supply-demand dynamics, which is the key paradigm for investment decision-making. 


"Capital goes where the cash flows". And with respect to Townsville's economy, the historical flow of government funding as Australia's largest garrison city with a high resident turnover has enabled the real estate and property management sector to become the 2nd largest contributor to GDP.

Management and general administration service sectors are leading. Yet again, this is an indication of the government contribution to the overall economy. These service-based sectors have replaced the heavyweight industrial mining and manufacturing sectors as the most relevant contributors to the Townsville economy just 4 years earlier.

The global financial crisis, reduced commodity prices and the subsequent downfall of infrastructure development businesses such as Clive Palmer's nickel refinery and associated local construction and manufacturing businesses have been frustrating for residential and industrial property construction.

But more precisely, the oversupply of accommodation in a receding economy has impacted the investors that are already vested in the market, which serves approximately 45 percent of the total housing stock in the economy.

Government intervention was a significant contributor to the sustained residential property approvals during the 4 year high of the construction sector.

The National Rental Affordability Scheme (NRAS) and military infrastructure spending contributed significant inflows while the private sector economy was losing confidence and laying off workers.

The reserve bank cash rate continued to fall and government grants stimulated continued borrowings at cheaper mortgage costs, stimulating building approvals and putting significant pressure on incumbent investors to reduce rental prices to maintain cash flows.

The evolving dependence of Townsville's economy on political and government funding, and therefore susceptibility to free market conditions in the absence of a globally relevant industrial sector, presents a significant material risk to Townsville's economic recovery. And therefore as a consequence, the capital and yield opportunities for investors in all sectors of the market.

Townsville's industrial economy is tinkering on the edge of mediocre growth and sustained limited opportunity because it is dependent on high commodity prices, low cash rates (driven by capital city prices) and shallow private capital investment in industry infrastructure. Respectively, the first of which has been falling and the cash rate is anticipated to increase, while industry venture capital is nearly non-existent.

The most significant private capital investment market in Townsville is residential real estate. In the absence of this politically driven market, private capital for the industry is unlikely to be directed to start-ups. Instead, new technologies for existing operators could increase, putting, even more, pressure on employment demand as labour is outsourced.

The announcement of the Elliott Springs development in the past week presents a further case study in explaining the duopoly that exists in the underlying drivers of the Townsville economy and how the land development and construction sector operates.

With the City precinct earmarked for 30,000 more residents (not dwellings) and Elliott Springs earmarked for another 20,000, plus additional northern corridor developments happening over the next 5-15 years, one could be wondering where the ongoing jobs are being created. Technology investment around the Internet of Things (IoT) is projecting up to 40 percent of existing jobs will be made redundant.

Construction is a significant political lever in an economy supporting significant government assets and initiatives, and soon to be influenced even further by the strategic military alliance with the Singapore and United States armies.

Unfortunately, the free market drivers impacting investor risk is exposed to orchestrated initiatives between politicians and construction moguls, resulting in the land development and construction industry profiteering and political capital raising at the behest of incumbent investors.

The effects of the land development industry and construction dynamic is a boom and bust cycle the likes of which is being experienced in Townsville now.

While free employment markets dropped over the 4-5 year cycle, land and construction starts continue to increase because the government funding cycle presents a two-speed economy not dissimilar to the mining industry compared to the rest of the economy across Australia in the last decade.

While the abundance of land development across Townsville continues and politicians can leverage the perceived economic stimulation, existing and incumbent investors will have to settle for subdued price growth in capital and accommodation markets for the foreseeable future.

References:

Herron Todd White Property Market Update November 2016
National Australia Bank Online Retail Sales Index June 2016
Australian Treasury Small Business Key Statistics and Analysis Report 2012
Rapid Realty Australia