Posts Tagged ‘Sydney Morning Herald’

The Big Gang Theory – is now facing withdrawal symptoms!

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Ask any business owner what the key to business longevity is and nine times out of ten the answer will always be – customer service. It all started just before the running of the 150th Melbourne Cup when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) announced its Statement by Glenn Stevens, Governor: Monetary Policy decision.  The punters were shocked with this rate rise shock – the fourth increase in 2010. The cash rate increase was later to be described as the RBA makes pre-emptive strike, economists say. Then as quick as Americain down the Flemington track the Commonwealth Bank adds 45bp to home loan rate effective from today, citing “overall wholesale funding costs continue to increase as cheaper funding expires and is replaced with more expensive funding”. The banking stewards (otherwise known as politicians) were quick to saddle – up although opposition Treasurer Joe Hockey was already in a somewhat awkward and lonely canter.

A graph that has figured prominently in Virtual Realty News is the Household Estimates of 2007 – 08 which is the last Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) measure of Australian households that rent, own with a mortgage and own without a mortgage – which I call The Big Third Theory.

  • The number that rent – 2,399,900 which equates to thirty (30) per cent.
  • The number that own with a mortgage – 2,835,200 which equates to thirty six (36) per cent.
  • The number that own without a mortgage – 2,679,200 which equates to thirty four (34) per cent.

Based on this anecdotal data where with each and every cash rate increase the impact affects sixty six (66) per cent or 5,079,100 Australian households. Politicians need to cease being statues.

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BUY PRINT

Another Tim Mooney brilliant capture that would make a great front cover for Eastern Suburbs real estate agents’ Christmas cards – nothing beats a sensational aerial shot.

Credit card debt more common than mortgage debt and we all know that the Big Gang Theory of increased funding does not apply when they are already charging consumers around twenty (20) per cent. When the Melbourne Institute revealed their June quarter 2010 results they announced that for the first time since November 2006, credit card debt is the most common form of debt among Australian households, rather than mortgage debt. The number of households with credit card debt was 36.6 per cent, while 33.9 per cent had mortgage debt. Credit card rates should be at the very same rate as home mortgage rates.

Customer service is all about meaning business not being a mean business – The Big Gang Theory.

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Joe Hockey has good idea, no – one takes notice given banks showing no rates restraint, despite massive profits so out came Joe Hockey’s Nine – Point Plan when he addressed the AIG Annual National Forum in Canberra on October 25 in Canberra – “It’s time to talk banking.” Banks, rates and regulations: who’s in charge here? As Westpac chief Gail Kelly calls for calm as anger builds over bank rate rises given the banks are wary of Hockey bandwagon. The irony being that just only last week it was Hockey who was copping the bashing when he suggested that he’d re – regulate interest rates. As Dennis Shanahan wrote in The AustralianIt’s Hockey’s turn to bash Swan. “In just a few moments yesterday, Joe Hockey and the Coalition went from being buffoons to heroes. And Wayne Swan went from being economically and politically superior to being populist, ineffective and trailing the opposition Treasury spokesman on banking policy.” Out from the gates then jumped Wayne Swan flags banking reforms declaring the federal government would now announce banking reforms next month prompting Hockey “The Jockey” to demand release reform plan now – the “Big Fella” was now on a roll dining out on roasted swan.

There was still plenty happening within Fort Fumble’s home economics kitchen when Phillip Coorey from the Sydney Morning Herald revealed – Out in the cold: Rudd held fake budget meetings to stop leaks not to be confused with steamed leeks. “Kevin Rudd and his senior ministers were so suspicious of Lindsay Tanner that they used to hold fake pre – budget meetings to ensure their plans did not leak. According to accounts of meetings of the now abandoned Strategic Priorities and Budget Committee, nicknamed the gang of four, some meetings with Mr Tanner would deliberately be light on detail. After the meeting concluded and the then finance minister had left, the other three members of the committee – Mr Rudd, Julia Gillard and Wayne Swan – would reconvene and discuss their budget plans in detail.”

Lindsay Tanner is writing a book and I can’t wait to read that given the revelations say very little for Kevin Rudd’s schoolyard games amid financial crisis. I can’t ever remember reading a more damaging report about an elected Australian government’s economic credibility. I must admit that I have always been a Lindsay Tanner admirer – he was smart, to the point and definitely not a populist policy proponent.  Kevin Rudd denies holding fake budget meetings … why am I not the least surprised.

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In the meantime, Australia is bathing in a budget surplus (not) as Labor racks up $25.2 billion deficit in just three months shadow minister for finance and debt reduction Andrew Robb reported. The latest government financial statement reveals a staggering budget deficit of $25.2 billion for the first three months of the financial year. “The government is banking on improvements in revenue to bring the budget back to surplus, yet this statement shows no signs of the level of improvement that will be required and therefore spending must be cut.” CommSec chief economist Craig James estimates that the underlying budget deficit in the year to September was a record $63.3 billion. “The main concern is that revenues are still tending sideways rather than showing signs of repair. Meanwhile, government spending is at record highs and showing no signs of stabilising.”

Without a doubt one of the smartest economic reports that I have read is Economic reform will curb pressure on rates which lays much of the blame for increased interest rates on inept government policies. “But while rate rises are a blunt instrument, they are just about the only way the RBA can suppress demand. With a rising dollar, which will depress exports other than minerals and energy production, it is an automatic stabiliser that will slow the economy. A far better solution would be for government to have invested in infrastructure – railways and ports – to increase the efficiency of exports and to have improved productivity in southeast Australia, which is not benefiting directly from the boom. But the Howard government spent the taxes raised by energy exports on its watch on welfare payments and Kevin Rudd threw money at unproductive job programs, as Julia Gillard is still doing.”

“In the current circumstances, the price of stalling economic reform will be more painful than interest rate rises”. Hence, building approvals slide more than expected in September with a 6.6 per cent fall – in the year to September building approvals were down 11.6 per cent.

So figures confirm building weak which is understandable given the Gillard government still has more than $6 billion to be spent with her Building Education Revolution. Don’t blame the Big Gang Theory entirely as we all know they suffer on compassionate grounds. The answer should not be directed to angry customers should switch banks: Gillard rather economic reform, and we all know what happened to the Henry Tax Review.

No wonder Australians want an election – now given both forms of government continue to ignore economic reform. It is becoming increasingly obvious that economics is not a strong point for either party of choice – hence the ongoing and growing budget deficit.

When it comes to Nation Building – Fort Fumble (Gillard) has lost the plot!

Subscriber sales jumped to $986,510,220 so we are closing in on the magic $1 billion in subscriber sales.

Cheers ^__^

This week’s sales Mosman real estate, Beauty Point real estate, Clifton Gardens real estate, Balmoral real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate, Cammeray real estate Click Here

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An election puzzle with so many missing pieces!

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The 2010 federal election is all about the polls (cometh the spin) then three years on, we have more broken promises than promises that actually came to fruition. Neither party has a single blueprint for the Australian economy, nor the nation as a whole and this was classically highlighted during the global financial crisis spend– a– thon which we are told constantly, saved the Australian economy from recession. Australia’s need to invest in infrastructure, is urgent – roads, rail and ports and this is why Fort Crumble faces election annihilation when NSW goes to the polls in March 2011.

Infrastructure in NSW ‘average to poor’ a scathing new report card from Engineers Australia where more than three quarters of the sectors require major or critical changes. This report highlights the point that industry can identify the problems, yet elected governments are incapable of preparing a work – in – progress strategy for Australia. Fix these problems because today our population is well ahead of infrastructure which was brilliantly explained in gotchanomics doesn’t bring home the real bacon.

Labor struggling in key states which led to rolling out the barrel – Labor denies pork – barrel suggestion. Andrew West from the Sydney Morning Herald wrote Back on track – and just the ticket for commuters “It is politically brave for a prime minister to appear publicly with a NSW premier these days. It is crazy brave to make a joint announcement about public transport. The NSW public is so cynical about public transport promises – after 15 years of projects being announced, postponed, shelved and re – announced – that voters no longer believe state Labor can deliver a crucial service.” The $2.100 billion rail link announcement for Parramatta and Epping will no doubt be shelved once Fort Crumble is removed permanently at the next state election – all aboard the PM’s Parramatta express. Who could forget reading How lazy Nathan Rees sold NSW short which explains why Gillard and Keneally fail on Sydney’s transport infrastructure funding. More than half the pledged monies promised in the current election will not be spent until after the next election in 2013 – pork rolled out on the never-never.

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BUY PRINT

Surveys reveal that Australia is home to the world’s least – affordable property. Pundits are at odds over whether it might end in a bang or a whimper – a great read Forever blowing bubbles. The Real Estate Institute of Australia recently announced that a contributing factor to the increase in house prices and the decline in housing affordability, is the under-supply of housing. According to the National Housing Supply Council, the gap between the supply and demand for housing will increase in the next eight years and this will put further pressure on house prices.

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Nothing new on offer since the houses that Kevin built – “It might be important to voters – but not the parties”, wrote Kevin Saulwick. “There may have been more pressing issues than housing affordability at the 2007 election, but not many. Which makes it all the more remarkable that three years later – and with the same level of community concern about the cost of living – there has been little focus on housing by Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott. When Kevin Rudd sailed into office, it was due to Labor’s success in putting itself on the side of the angels when it came to housing costs. Rudd’s message was simple: he sympathised with families bleeding ever – larger payments on mortgages and rent. And he came to office offering policies aimed at increasing the supply of affordable properties to help reduce the pressures.” The Emperor was de-throned by the Orange Roughie because he had lost his way, then poor polling saw a phoenix – like resurrection to lead Labor to better polling – hence the soap opera.

Housing affordability can come down only with much improved infrastructure policies – Capital city house prices up 18 per cent from last year – ABS even though home loans sink to nine – year low. When infrastructure is non–existent, this leads to construction slumps in July because there is no point building, where there is no demand (especially when NSW has no South West rail link, North West rail link, Parramatta to Epping rail, M4 East and M5 East duplication). If these facilities were in place as promised, NSW construction would be booming and housing affordability and rentals much more affordable. How can Australia “move forward” when infrastructure is moving backwards, compared to our population growth? Policy on the run again as NSW Labor in the dark over Gillard’s Parramatta – Epping rail link promise which has been revealed as the rail pledge a carrot in push for McKew win for the seat of Bennelong – Maxine who?

The last remaining economic data statistic before next Saturday’s election was released this week – shock jobless rise where the three states of major concern for federal Labor – NSW, Queensland and Western Australia all experienced unemployment increases.

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Whilst home loans fall as interest rates bite the good news is that the Reserve Bank of Australia RBA statement suggests longer pause given RBA forecasts plenty of blue sky ahead. With the election ‘soap opera’ out of the way next Saturday, we can expect some normality back in our property markets. Electoral promises rarely come to fruition as The Emperor “Kevin 07” found, even though he has been brought back to life – with a faint pulse.

Richardson & Wrench Mosman & Neutral Bay (RWM) has been busy working on our infrastructure and this week, we released our RWM mobile website. Previously with your mobile phone you could view our website with your phone which was a navigation nightmare because it is impossible to view a macro site on a micro application and do justice to our properties. Agentpoint our developers this week launched our mobile micro site for mobile phones users.

Open a browser on your mobile phone and type in www.m.rwm.com.au. Our research and development team are currently testing new technologies, all to improve your RWM real estate experience..
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Online is our real estate industry point of difference, because we are the only agency that gets it – so now you get it. Our clients can now sit outside one of our properties and view it on their mobile phone (outside set inspection times) from our mobile RWM website.

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Thanks to Steve and Richard for filling in whilst I was relaxing in our Thailand branch office which is better known (by me) as the Tipsy Prawn.

Cheers ^__^

This week’s sales Mosman real estate, Beauty Point real estate, Clifton Gardens real estate, Balmoral real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate, Cammeray real estate Click Here

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Back flips, mistakes and a broken economic compass!

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With the benefit of hindsight, we ask, did the powers that be in Canberra get the stimulus spending right whilst addressing the global financial crisis? If not, what have they learned from it (if anything)? The answer would be absolutely nothing, given nothing has, or is, being done about housing. Construction activity falls in June which is a clue dropping 6.8 points in June to a 10 – month low. More construction equates to more homes which in turn, reduces house prices. The construction industry ‘is’ the third biggest employer in Australia (or  should that be ‘was’?)

The major problems attributed to Forts Fumble and Crumble is that economically, they confuse usage with wastage (otherwise known as “reckless and wasteful spending”). After all, Fort Fumble is still borrowing almost $100 million a day which is in direct competition with home borrowers and small business as Joe Hockey tells govt to cool spending.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) met this week and decided to keep rates on hold despite solid numbers. Of course the announcement was met with the usual rhetoric Wayne Swan welcomes interest rate decision citing “while we’ve fought off the recession and kept unemployment low, we know that a lot of people are still doing it tough and recent rate rises have stretched family budgets.” More Treasurer speak “we’re focussed on reforming and strengthening our economy with investments to harness mining boom mark 11 where the Liberals failed in mining boom mark 1.” Wayne is almost Shakespearean with his economic recitals and enactments although the RBA keeps saying Government must rein in demand growth: McKibbin.

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Thought we would head south this week for a change of Sydney scenery

BUY PRINT

Let’s take a closer look at Fort Fumble’s mark 11 harnessing – mining tax changes had one purpose which was taking pressure off key marginal seats. Since the new deal was announced last Friday, it has been described as a compromise, a back flip and a monumental cave–in MRRT revenue loss to be double government estimate: Goldman.

The tax was reduced from 40 to 22.5 per cent a hard tax to swallow as Alan Kohler wrote on Business Spectator.”More than double the profit threshold above which it cuts in and reduce the number of companies being taxed from 2,500 to 320, and lose only one – eighth of the money. Julia Gillard is a prime minister who Gets Things Done – the Mary Poppins of tax policy.”

No regrets over mining tax – Treasury Secretary Ken Henry whilst Martin Ferguson concedes: ‘We got super – profits tax wrong’ I can’t wait to see what happens with mark 111 as government ‘dishonest’ on revised super profits tax revenue as government sacrificed $35 bn in tax deal with big miners.

Time to move above ground where caution is being thrown to the wind (again) – which I might add is not a bad thing. Of course it would have been much better had Fort Fumble got their stimulus issues right which unfortunately was not the case as I have long argued – roads, infrastructure, housing subdivisions, hospitals – a long term future model. Fort Crumble was at it again also with another painful snub of Sydney transport, M5 set to be delayed and doodling as Metro plan burns $500m. Then on Thursday we had 50,000 Sydney homes without power again broken infrastructure in NSW.

Not one Sydney transport project has been listed as a priority for the federal Government’s (Fort Fumble) latest infrastructure funding targets. “Blasting the NSW Government’s failure to properly plan billion – dollar road and transport projects, Infrastructure Australia has instead selected a $4.9 billion Melbourne metro train project, an Adelaide freight rail line and a Federal Highway road upgrade in the ACT as priorities.” Work this out – the Pacific Highway gets an upgrade and Sydney gets absolutely nothing – Sydney has been placed in the too hard basket along with our politicians. No strings attached with Sydney anymore.

Great news for property owners who sit within a 5 – 10 – 15 kilometre radius of our CBD as evidenced when Jonathan Chancellor published this week in the Sydney Morning Herald Top 20 Sydney house sales just the one recorded sale outside the radius – clue!

Mosman posted five of the top 20 sales.  Our very own Stephen Patrick had the highest sale and Richard Simeon had another in Warringah Road. This saw  Richardson & Wrench Mosman & Neutral Bay (RWM) record two of the five, which this week, took our Internet subscriber sales to $956,784,220.

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So how is our Spring/Summer property market looking? Year ahead good, not great where Australia’s market economists declare there will be no double– dip recession here. Buyers expected to favour private sales over auctions as growth slows. We predict the Mosman market to shift (initially) in the upcoming market to online advertising – stage one as property markets stabilise. Why? It’s all about our real estate ring of confidence.

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As Macquarie Economics Research explained:

  • With more volatility in global financial markets, an increasing number of analysts are betting that this will force the RBA to leave rates unchanged over the next year. Certainly, if the credit markets dry up the RBA will not hesitate to cut interest rates. But with the Government’s deal with major mining companies over taxation, removing one of the clouds over investment, the RBA might actually have become more confident in the growth outlook.

Don’t forget rise in inflation to irk RBA where the annual reading of 3.6 per cent rate of inflation rose for the eighth straight month. This is well outside the RBA’s target of between 2 and 3 per cent. Rents will continue to drive inflation up given a six year wait to save deposit for first home in Sydney which is quite ironic given Infrastructure Australia is not investing in Sydney. IMF sees strong growth in Australia, but risks grow although I would add that government economic policy is an even greater risk on our shores.

Sydney needs a plan and it is obvious that  Forts Fumble and Crumble have absolutely no idea on how to address such complex issues. Sydney commuters can expect to see new signs on all transport systems – Turn around You Are Going the Wrong Way – no infrastructure ahead. When Fort Crumble has difficulty filling out Infrastructure Australia forms it’s no wonder NSW is a basket case. More back flips from Fort Fumble where Gillard eats her words over refugees as her options dwindle to six countries for east Timor alternative.

The Emperor may have gone however the art of the back flip remains the preferred exercise for a government that just two weeks ago, had lost its way. So what would one call the MRRT and East Timor? Must be a phase they are going through although we need more than promises to judge Julia. Maybe she has short term memory loss?

Cheers ^__^

This week’s sales Mosman real estate, Beauty Point real estate, Clifton Gardens real estate, Balmoral real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate, Cammeray real estate Click Here

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Thar’s deposits in them thar hills – and thar all mine!

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That is what The Emperor (Kevin Rudd) thought and now they are fighting words where Fort Fumble (Federal Government) will be forced to perform yet another monumental back – flip on policy. Back to that over-worked drawing board where a 2010 federal budget is on the political rack.  The gloves are off as government and miners trade blows over tax as Wayne’s world comes unstuck which should not come as a great surprise when one looks at a government built around crumbling policy failures.

Ross Gittins in the Sydney Morning Herald wrote this  interesting story “Shonky advisers have led Rudd badly astray” It’s not just The Emperor’s reputation on the line, the Australian economy is on the nose too. The Minister for Mining, Ken Henry, who these days is wearing many hats, has a different interpretation.

Rudd’s dollar delusion – Since the end of April, the Australian dollar has been hit much harder than the euro, so for our decline to be entirely linked to the global crisis, Australia would need to be on its knees with a huge debt problem. But, of course, as Kevin Rudd correctly points out, the Australian government is in a strong borrowing position.  Leaving aside what was apparent in the marketplace, logic dictates that the mining tax had to be part of the slump.  A cavalier effort last Friday when dollar rout ‘stemmed by Reserve Bank’.

Let’s look back at The Emperor’s blackboard of back – flips: save the whales, fuelwatch, grocerywatch, kids laptops, takeover of hospitals by mid 2009, hospital reform, schools stimulus infrastructure programme, 2020 Summit (where he met Kate Blanchet), insulation program, refugees,  insulation industry, foreign investment review board removal, mining tax, childcare centre building program, carbon emissions programme and of course his “greatest moral challenge of our time” the list goes on. Is this the worst CV in Australia’s political history? In search of a photographic capture that best describes Fort Fumble’s business and economic outlook?

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BUY PRINT

On Q&A this week, former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser (stole the show for mine) when he took this question from the audience and what a wordsmith he  is (and resigned from the Liberal party).

Paul Sherrington: “Controversial Melbourne columnists like Andrew Bolt and others have declared the Rudd Government to be the worst and most wasteful government in living memory, perhaps unfairly. Given a choice between the Whitlam Government, as you intimately know it, Mr Fraser, and the Rudd Government so far, which do you think is better?”

Malcolm Fraser: “Oh, you’ve got to say – I’d use different terms; “least worst”. The Rudd Government so far, but you didn’t take a very good – I don’t want to criticise journalists, because you know, some journalists have very extreme views and generally only report one side of a question, as we’ve heard, perhaps. The administrative failures of the current government, whether it’s in delivering houses to indigenous people, or whether it’s in putting insulation in roofs or building classrooms for schools with government schools costing several times what it costs private schools, or what other things they have sought to administer? They’re going to muck up the hospitals next. The administrative failures are gross and half of them aren’t pursued by the opposition and the administrative  failures are as great, if not greater, than the administrative failures in Gough Whitlam’s government. But Gough’s failures were of a different kind, of a different quality, and I don’t want to go into those now. It wasn’t straight out of administering what should have been a plain, straightforward programme, which for some reason this government seems totally incapable of doing.”

Now to those other deposits – not mineral but banking.  This week, we saw the “Big Four” banks  realise, given the current economic movements, (downwards) that they now ant your hard earned monies trapped away in their vaults – the banking oxygen of the future. Global Financial Crisis II looms if debt woes grow so it is reasonable to assume that our banks urgently require a topping up of liquid funds. Lending ratios have fallen from 100 per cent to 60 per cent in a matter of months for residential properties. The current offers are 6.00 + which is much higher than the current cash rate of 4.50 per cent. I would not lock and load in yet as it will get higher given the global demand for money. Throw in the fact that the Reserve Bank of Australia announced this week that credit card purchases rose 12.2 per cent over the year to March 2010. The value of purchases made in March was $19.9 billion, up by $2.1 billion from the previous year.

0.3BE!OpenElement&FieldElemFormat=jpgA busy few weeks for the Reserve Bank of Australia – who just released its Competition in the Deposit Market. See a pattern forming? For depositors, retribution, given term deposits are now challenging investment in the shock market, hedge funds can’t short you now and no more wild ride for Australian equities.
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We are definitely witnessing a shift where businesses and households are actively paying down debt as a direct result of the uncertain times ahead. Unsustainable home loans are of great concern where we now have a rise in middle – class bankrupts where even the Pope, ECB chief slam spendthrift governments. In Australia, we are already witnessing first hand interest rises kicking the stuffing out of auction clearance rates.

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This explains why deposit rates are suddenly attracting all the attention at the moment and in all probability will remain a major player for the foreseeable future. Work within the markets and not without them as this is not a viable time to pinch – hit profit taking models. Ever seen a correction before? Not sure if Hedge funds are actually not Dredge funds and it should also be noted that  Fort Crumble (NSW government) has successfully dredged NSW where in terms of infrastructure, it is now paralysed by parliamentary past performances. Prepare for 20 years of transport despair given it will be decades before any new roads are built.

Fort Crumble approves 4,500 new North shore houses where residents will now spend their annual leave on the Pacific Highway. Cashed – up foreigners snap up homes who spent $14.900 billion on houses and land last year. Once again The Emperor identified that he is an economic  illiterate and foreign investors selected Victoria and Queensland ahead of NSW. NSW once upon a time, like the fairytale, was the number one choice.

Sydney one of the world’s top 10 cities Australia’s other state capitals are out of the world’s top 20, but still in the top 40, with Perth ranked 21, Canberra 26, Adelaide 32 and Brisbane at 36.

  • Vienna, Austria
  • Zurich, Switzerland
  • Geneva, Switzerland
  • (tie) Auckland, New Zealand
  • (tie) Vancouver, Canada
  • Dusseldorf, Germany
  • (tie) Frankfurt, Germany
  • (tie) Munich, Germany
  • Bern, Switzerland
  • Sydney, Australia

As Malcolm Fraser once said “life was not meant to be easy” which he scripted from within his very own government. I wonder what it should be under the present Labor regime? A suggestion: hey “big spender” bankruptcy is our very own act of life!

The number of security clearances of asylum seekers by ASIO has risen tenfold in recent years. (Security clearances by asylum seekers up) in 2008/09 ASIO processed 207 irregular security assessments and in the period of July 2009 to March 2010 – 2028 assessments, which is attributed to KRudd border security – and guess who pays for that?

Our website sponsors announced this week - First Home Buyers offered a helping hand from Mortgageport which many subscribers to Virtual Realty News will find interesting. Also, the Balmoral Burn is on this Sunday and this event has become an iconic Sydney event.

Cheers ^__^

This week’s sales Mosman real estate, Beauty Point real estate, Clifton Gardens real estate, Balmoral real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate, Cammeray real estate Click Here

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It’s official! Mosman is Australia’s number one real estate municipality.

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Big statement you may say – well we didn’t say it RP Data’s Property Pulse revealed “Premium properties provide higher returns but volumes have remained relatively low in 2009”. It then went on to say “for cashed – up buyers the premium housing market could be poised to deliver excellent returns in the future.” A comprehensive property report that tracks Australian municipality machinations from 1999 through to 2009. What is interesting to observe, is exactly how the global financial crisis impacted property markets. We have published all the graphs in this week’s edition.

Property Pulse Highlights

  • Sydney’s Mosman leads the nation with the highest number of house sales priced at $1 m or higher.
  • Sydney and Melbourne featured equally in the top 20 suburbs for $1 m plus house sales in 2009.
  • The Western Suburbs of Perth holds two of the top performing suburbs in the analysis.
  • For units, the Sydney suburb of Pyrmont led the charge with 95 unit sales priced at $1 m or higher (that’s only 22 per cent of all Pyrmont sales in 2009,highlighting the wide variety of unit product in this inner city suburb).

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BUY PRINT

The Sydney Morning Herald’s property editor Jonathan Chancellor wrote last Saturday, “Mosman turns up auction heat”. “Mosman has led the resurgence in auction activity with 100 listings in the first quarter, up from 43 during the same period last year. The pricey suburb’s 67 per cent success rate bettered the dismal 37 per cent clearance rate during the eye of the global financial storm.”

Each week we publish the weekly sales results and I would add that (some) agents have been doctoring the results of auctions which were passed in then, hey presto, two to four weeks later the very same properties reappear as ‘Sold – Auction’ (never let the facts get in the way of a good story).

Across Sydney, agents conducted 4560 auctions in the first quarter of 2010, compared to 2960 over the same period in 2009 (according to Australian Property Monitors). The previous record was 4330 in 2008 so by all accounts Mosman again, is up and up and we can predict with confidence, that despite interest rate increases, consumer sentiment should not wane despite rate pain.

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Source: RP Data

These are telling graphs that (historically) identify 2007 as being the all time peak property performance year. Take the 4330 auction record quarter in 2008. You will note that there was hardly any impact on the 2008 sales results simply because just a minority found new owners. The majority recorded a zero sales result. In 2010 we have seen new Sydney record auction volumes and this time around , agents are matching vendors with purchasers. That said, in 2010 there is a distinct possibility that the previous record sales results posted in 2007 will be surpassed, because top – end property markets are now re-activating. This explains the lengths we (RWM) go to on a weekly basis, to accurately cover our demographic property market. It also endorses the fact that we have the number one online Mosman newsletter and are positioned as the number one Mosman agency with Australia’s greatest number of database real estate subscriber sales $943,479,220.

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Source: RP Data

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Source: RP Data

10% rates on the way proved to be a interesting headline last Sunday. The only problem is, that consumers get it and Fort Fumble (Federal Government) doesn’t. Suffice to say: when in an election year, keep buying votes. Rory Robertson, Macquarie’s interest rate strategist, says a booming labour market could force the RBA’s hand. “If the economy keeps on growing like this, we will hit the previous highs in the cash rate.” Mr Robertson went on to say, “we already have a template of what happens when the economy grows strongly – we saw it before the Lehman Brothers collapse in 2008 – so we know how the Reserve Bank responds to the threat of inflation. It hiked aggressively back then, and it is doing the same now.”

On the one hand we have the Reserve Bank of Australia telling us to curb spending while Fort Fumble keeps spending at record rates. In search of an answer I went School building program won’t stop: govt Federal Education Minister Julia Gillard says the $16 billion school building programme won’t be suspended, pending an investigation, because it would mean job losses?

Don’t waste the boom, Mr Rudd where Alan Kohler wrote on his Business Spectator “In Australia, according to the ABS, there is now $133 billion worth of construction in the pipeline – the greatest investment boom in history.” Looks like our Education Minister needs educating on exactly what is happening in Australia.

Oh dear! Miss Prissy Julia Gillard hires a banker to unearth schools stimulus. A Mosman banker too! Undoubtedly, the findings will make for great reading. Personally, I don’t blame the builders given they were asked to quote for the building works and Miss Prissy approved the quotes.

What annoys, is that yet another $14 million has to be spent to correct political incompetence – on top of insulation, schools and border protection. The list goes on and today, Australian taxpayers are fast becoming a modern day version of a human ATM.

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House prices plateau as buyers flee in droves – buyers are deserting the Sydney property market at the rate of 1000 a month, causing real estate professionals to predict an “exhausted market” where prices plateau for the rest of the year. This will definitely happen in many areas although it won’t happen in Mosman. Official figures show the number of loans to buy houses in NSW slipped from in September to just 14,300 in February after sliding in each of the past five months. The Australian Bureau of Statistics figures identify February as the worst month for home loans since 2001. Nationwide, just 2174 people borrowed to buy new homes, a figure that also reflects the low number of new homes on offer. School canteens override Construction slides as affordability worsens.

Alan Kohler from Business Spectator has a great ability to simplifying things and again, he brilliantly achieved this, when he wrote this week Deflating the credit bubble myth. “That’s why everyone keeps getting the property market wrong even the bulls have been surprised at its strength.”

“Anyway, a plateau this year would hardly be surprising, in fact another 12 per cent rise in the national median house price in 2010 would be staggering, and would see the RBA cash rate closer to 6 per cent than 5 per cent by early 2011.” My prediction is a cash rate closer to 6 per cent by Christmas given clearance rates in Sydney last week hit 70.7 to 73 per cent. Melbourne recorded 75.5 to 85 per cent – clearance rates above 80 per cent are considered a boom market.

Something I been saying for years!

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Rising support to abolish state governments no doubt when the respective premiers read this the fear factor of incompetence overrode hospitals takeover on critical list. Four in ten voters favour abolishing state governments, seeing them as the least – effective level of government and increasingly looking to Federal Government to fix health and other problems. Fort Crumble had yet another outstanding week for leadership Blame game begins on F3 traffic chaos and Losing bidder won ferry contract. All part of The Emperor’s (Kevin Rudd) daily growing pains trouble Rudd in Big Australia.

Back to Mosman – our cutest and newest resident celebrated his one month birthday this week.

Happy Birthday “Pathi Harn” (Miracle) – The Emperor is praying for one too, because he knows that voters have memories like elephants!

Cheers ^__^

This week’s sales Mosman real estate, Beauty Point real estate, Clifton Gardens real estate, Balmoral real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate, Cammeray real estate Click Here

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Where Messrs. Rudd and Swan, blew a golden opportunity!

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I’m not talking about the de-throning of the Minister for Pink Batts (Peter Garrett) debacle either! Rather, just exactly what went wrong with their misguided Nation Building spend fest that has now resonated into a property boom (in some areas). History shows such market movements can be contagious, as was subprime, which brought about the global financial crisis (GFC). Fort Fumble (Federal Government) reacted by directing its spending obsession into schools (with plaques) when in fact, it should have taken aim at our housing, transport and health debacles. What Messrs. Rudd and Swan missed, was that all Australians live in houses, use transport, and do require hospital assistance.  By comparison, a much smaller percentage attends school – another no brainer!

The 7.30 Report ran an interesting piece this week Australian houses amongst least affordable in the world. Its working paper was the latest release of the 6th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey: 2010 which is always an interesting read. As Kerry O’Brien stated “There is some concern that this latest property boom again raises the spectre of an unhealthy bubble; but there’s a range of contradictory elements at work that potentially pose a profound challenge for Australian authorities.” In 2009, Australia constructed around 130,000 homes nationally when we needed to build 190,000 to meet population growth. In 2010 it is projected that Australia will construct just 152,000 homes – so Fort Fumble has builders working on schools? Home prices will continue to rise as will rents too! Supply is not even close to meeting demand.

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It was Nude Opera this week when renowned photographer Spencer Tunick enticed approximately 5,200 Australians to bare all on the forecourt. A case of love the one you’re with or maybe a case of I spy with my little eye someone beginning with…? The shoot has been called Mardi Gras: The Base.

Tim Mooney Photography

It was another tough week for The Emperor who fronted The 7.30 Report Kevin the confessor and said  “We are taking a whacking in the polls now. I’m sure we’ll take an even bigger whacking in the period ahead, and the bottom line is I think we deserve it, both – not just in terms of recent events, but more broadly.” True, when The Daily Telegraph ran “Prime Minister Kevin Rudd losing support in western Sydney” the Mad Monk seized the moment “Rudd rattled, says Abbott” then The Emperor (later to morph as Dr. Emperor) faced an attack from within “Rudd mea culpas have shot party in foot, say ministers”. Never one to miss an opportunity, I grabbed this comment on The 7.30 ReportKevin the confessor.

The Emperor “One of the problems that we have had as a government, for which I accept responsibility, is we didn’t anticipate how hard it was going to be delivering things.” PM, this is otherwise known as business acumen. The Mad Monk responded “Kevin Rudd thinks he’s the economic genius who saved Australia from a recession but the public might conclude he’s just won the gold medal for waste.”

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With his new policies on the run, now Dr. Emperor is taking a scalpel to our hospitals. Amazing what a difference a week makes. This political operation long overdue and Kevin Rudd to cut away the dead tissue of our ailing health care system Dr. Emperor moved into a totally different theatre, that being the operating theatre – Rudd announces $30.9 funding takeover of the public hospitals where just a week from the Pink batt debacle  Rudd’s hospital reform more radical than 1984 Medicare revamp. So how is The Emperor going to doctor our hospitals? Rudd takes $50 bn from states for hospitals. Not bad, given they are already in deficit with a growing interest payment of nearly $20 billion per annum. We found two great articles that critiqued Dr. Emperor’s health announcement Graphs galore but answers to big hospital reform questions are scarce by Lenore Taylor of the Sydney Morning Herald and Steve Murphy from Business Spectator Balance of Power. Australian states and territories are currently drowning in debt to the tune of approximately $133 billion which is about the equivalent of what Fort Fumble now owes (both increasing not decreasing)

Fort Crumble (NSW government) would be ‘champing at the bit’ given, NSW takes the biggest slice in GST handouts. This no doubt  assisted their  mortgagee – in – possession sale of “NSW Lotteries sold in $1 billion deal”where a confused Treasurer Eric Roozendaal said, “That means total proceeds of the sale of NSW Lotteries for NSW taxpayers of more than $1 billion – money that will go straight into funding frontline services for the families of NSW like teachers, police and nurses, and strengthening the state’s balance sheet.” He later said the sale proceeds would go directly into paying down the state’s debt – a margin call?

Pulling plenty of strings, our “Puppet Premier” then embarked on an estimated $750,000 television campaign in an attempt to convince constituents just how Australian she really is. No mention of NSW Labor just her website Kristina Keneally – although I did notice that our Puppet Premier forgot that when any Premier runs an advertorial they always have our Australian flag in the background – another massive blunder! It keeps getting worse “NSW fails to secure funding for infrastructure” in a staggering admission (not really) Fort Crumble announced that it was awaiting an invitation. Infrastructure Australia then advised that submissions were not by invitation only – Fort Crumble consistently hopeless. Yes Minister!
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So let’s look at what has happened in our Mosman market compared to same time in 2009. Bearing mind that in 2010 some sales are yet to be recorded at Domain Property Data.

Houses – I January 2009 to 1 March 2009 compared to 1 January 2010 to 1 March 2010

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  • Total 2009 – 30. Total 2010 – 35
  • Sales 2009 – 26. Sales 2010 – 31
  • Total value 2009 – $84,845,000. Total value 2010 – $51,597,000
  • Median price 2009 – $2,136,500. Median price 2010 – $2,150,000
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    As you can see, it is line ball where we will be monitoring results throughout 2010 and calling it as it is. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) moved the cash rate upwards this week by 0.25 per cent to 4.00 per cent and here is (what the economists said) about this week’s increase. Certainly when the Australian Bureau of Statistics revealed that Australians spent $20.100 billion on a shopping spree in January this did not help the RBA’s decision.

    As quick as a flash, the banks jumped on the increase where the standard variable rates are;

  • CBA – 6.86 per cent
  • ANZ – 6.91 per cent
  • Westpac – 7.01 per cent
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    Of greater concern is The Emperor’s move into hospitals and his threat to call a referendum should the broke states and territories not agree. Since Federation, there have been 44 referendums and just 8 have been successful. Success of late, has not been one of The Emperors strong points. Then again it is an election year so anything goes. Policy on the run can have dire consequences. Just look at Fort Crumble selling off state assets.

    Our Puppet Premier in white – another clue! That flag was raised years ago so (the Fort has some continuity), what assets are next? What do you think about Dr. Rudd’s hospital announcement? Obviously one week’s work and better known as “policy on the run” to stop his poll haemorrhaging voter dissent.

    Cheers ^__^

    This week’s sales Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Balmoral real estate, Neutral Bay real estate, Cammeray real estate Click Here

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    The ABC’s of politics, property and performance!

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    In real estate we speak about position, position and position. Sometimes when politicians appear on television, their position can be an embarrassment because, although they can talk the talk, they can’t walk the walk! The Emperor (Kevin Rudd) found himself in that exact position when he appeared on Q&A – Monday night on that ABC at Old Parliament House, Canberra. Journalists had an absolute field day (as did viewers) “At the end of the day, the kids caned Kevin on Q&A” by David Penberthy in The Punch (another great daily online read). I well remember noticing this point. “One of the funniest things about the show was how so many of the young people in the crowd smirked in amusement at Rudd’s Ruddisms – “there’s no magic wand”, “but you know something”, and the ever – present “at the end of the day”, and his use of hand gestures and the sweeping arm to explain the scary arrival of the GFC.” He was trying to gild his lily which wilted after approximately five minutes of prudent interrogation by our country’s future leaders!

    They say “nothing makes it harder to remember campaign promises than getting elected” and The Emperor would have observed that his Fort Fumble is now under greater scrutiny and attack from all sides. The Daily Telegraph ran the following stories “Kevin Rudd’s 795 days of empty promises” and “Kevin Rudd’s report card: could do better”. A tough week for The Emperor or is it just that politicians make headlines running for something or running from something?

    No doubt he will be very fit by the time he takes us to the polls this year given so many empty promises have glaringly emerged with our “economic conservative” Prime Minister. Joe Hockey fared much better as “Giant Tinkerbell” tutu, magic wand and crown.

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    Surfs Up! As too are wobbegong attacks although I did chuckle when a witness described the shark as a Great White – although these surfers look unperturbed whilst catching waves at Manly Beach

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    Tim Mooney Photography

    So from politics, let’s move to property and performance where we mark the report card for Cremorne house results from 2007 to 2009 (next week we examine Neutral Bay houses).

    CREMORNE PROPERTIES SOLD REPORT – (House and Semi only)

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    1 JANUARY 2009 to 31 DECEMBER 2009

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    • Total number offered – 91 (Mosman 334)
    • Total number of sales recorded – 87 (Mosman 303)
    • Total value sold – $157,197,000 (Mosman $668,966,377)
    • Public Auction – 25 properties to a total value of $38,727,500
    • Private Treaty – 62 properties to a total value of $118,469,500
    • Median Price – $1,450,000 (Mosman $2,000,000)
    • Average Price – $1,871,392 (Mosman $2,397,728)
    • Highest Sale – $13,500,000 (RWM)

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    CREMORNE PROPERTIES SOLD REPORT – (House and Semi only)

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    1 JANUARY 2008 to 31 DECEMBER 2008

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    • Total number offered – 96 (Mosman 360)
    • Total number of sales recorded – 80 (Mosman 287)
    • Total value sold – $164,864,550 (Mosman $774,865,612)
    • Public Auction – 24 properties to a total value of $48,531,000
    • Private Treaty – 56 properties to a total value of $116,333,550
    • Median Price – $1,650,000 (Mosman $2,000,000)
    • Average Price – $2,113,648 (Mosman $2,738,041)
    • Highest Sale – $8,280,000 (RWM)

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    CREMORNE PROPERTIES SOLD REPORT – (House and Semi only)

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    1 JANUARY 2007 to 31 DECEMBER 2007

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    • Total number offered – 100 (Mosman 456)
    • Total number of sales recorded – 96 (Mosman 412)
    • Total value sold – $223,006,433 (Mosman $1,182,372,720)
    • Public Auction – 28 properties to a value of $52,452,600
    • Private Treaty – 68 properties to a value of $174,861,433
    • Median Price – $1,700,000 (Mosman $2,300,000)
    • Average Price – $ 2,347,436 (Mosman $2,869,836)
    • Highest Sale – $15,000,000 (new Cremorne record)
    Source: Australian Property Monitors

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    SUMMARY CREMORNE HOUSE PRICES FROM 2007 TO 2009

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    Note that for Mosman and Cremorne in 2008 and 2009, the years of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), Richardson & Wrench Mosman & Neutral Bay (RWM) posted the highest recorded sales for each year. During the GFC, Cremorne traded as usual 2009 – 87 sales, 2008 produced 80 sales and 2007 recorded 96 sales. Mosman bunkered down 2009 – 303 sales, 2008 – 287 sales and 2007 – 412. It should also be noted that Cremorne posted the highest sale in 2009 at $13,500,000 over Mosman $13,200,000 (both vendors are Virtual Realty News subscribers).

    So Mosman property and performance was back in the spotlight this week when it made the front page of The Sydney Morning Herald . “No more withdrawal symptoms as bankers again splash the cash” and “A bonus is a must, says the real estate crowd” . I would add that our 2010 market is too early to call – a key clue for subscribers to our daily email alerts will be our under offer and sold alerts – our website is now the Mosman sales barometer.

    Peter Martin from The Sydney Morning Herald sent another warning to The Emperor when he wrote “Interest rate rises in Labor hands” – “The head of the Reserve Bank has held out the prospect of continuing low interest rates, as long as Labor sticks to its pledge to restrain spending.” Which is highly unlikely in an election year although I did chuckle when I read, “Joyce link between rates, ‘gross over-simplification’, says Henry”.

    Somewhat ironic, with the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) saying that Labor again accumulated debt and the Howard regime paid it off in seventeen years of unprecedented economic growth. This again points me to the Henry Tax Report which is as mysterious as a government grant from The Emperor in a Liberal seat – it never happens. Makes one wonder just why this report (six weeks since its release) remains highly confidential.

    What is not confidential is that RWM no longer offer properties for rent. Our total focus now is on sales and Agentpoint has delivered what I consider the smartest homepage in the real estate industry.

    We are proud to further develop our online business – as our business is your business.

    Cheers ^__^

    For this week’s recorded Balmoral real estate, Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

    Follow Me on Twitter


    Nothing beats controlled political chaos!

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    An extraordinary week in Australian politics that resembled the “Battle of Sydney Harbour” or maybe “Battleships in the Big Bathtub” – where part of all contestants’ boundaries (by coincidence) were the high water marks of Sydney Harbour. The “Mad Monk” won line honours and yet, as with any race (fluid spill motions) there are always protests and on the very same day, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) broke tradition and raised the cash rate (+0.25%) for the third consecutive month – a day of threes!

    The cash rate, now at 3.75 per cent, keeps heading north and whilst on north, rumours that “The Emperor” Kevin Rudd is auditioning for Getaway, remain totally unsubstantiated. We can however, be sure that somewhere, he is up – up – and away and if he does call a double dissolution, will have to return to our shores sooner rather than later.

    Gerard Henderson wrote an interesting article that appeared in the Sydney Morning HeraldLodge is a long way off, but the new man will shore up base. “Since its formation in 1944, the Liberal Party has won office from Labor on three occasions, Robert Menzies defeated Ben Chifley in 1949, Malcolm Fraser prevailed over Gough Whitlam in December 1975 and John Howard vanquished Paul Keating in March 1996.” What I did find amazing was this “It is most unlikely that Abbott can lead the Coalition to victory in next year’s election. No government has been defeated in its first election since 1931, when Labor prime minister, James Scullin, faced not only the impact of the Great Depression but also splits within his own party.”

    eMiddleHead

    Was the Mad Monk bunkered down at his Mosman headquarters – whilst observing troop movements at the harbour bunkers of Turnbull and Hockey? Loose lips sink ships. We asked Tim Mooney to fly over Tony Abbott’s Mosman bunker.

    www.timmooneyphotography.com

    Westpac has jumped the starting gun where as quick as a flash it raised its standard variable home loan by 45 basis points to 6.76 per cent which comes into effect today. On November 5, 2009 John Rolfe from The Daily Telegraph wrote Cut Government taxes on savings, says Westpac boss Gail Kelly. It would appear to some, that raising rates has nothing to do with household savings. National Australia Bank (NAB) increased its home loan rates by +0.25 per cent and then attacked Westpac with this announcement “We are determined to be competitive, to offer our customers a better deal and attract new customers to NAB. Today we are sending a message to customers at Westpac, and the other banks, that NAB can offer them a better deal.”

    “Westpac CEO Gail Kelly argued yesterday (November 4, 2009) that if we all had more money salted away the country could have ducked the global financial crisis.” So in the aftermath now that the crisis has passed one can only then assume that Westpac is quickly making up for lost opportunities. Business Spectator – THE DISTILLERY: Waving Westpac through John Durie of The Australian concludes that the bank “is acting entirely rationally by extending the duration of its loans, chasing deposits aggressively as evidenced by its present campaign offering 6.8 per cent for 12 – month money and raising the cost of loans to protect profits. Its deposits now offer 130 basis points more than its closest competitors and 145 basis points more than the ANZ. This is a bank demonstrating its market strength emphatically, unworried by the potential for either market or political downside.” Or “roughly in simpatico is Matthew Stevens of The Australian who reasons that “Westpac’s decision to confront its customers with the nasty realities of our national funding dilemma serves to, once again, demonstrate the shaping dislocation of the Australian banking system triggered by the GFC. The latest credit growth numbers, for example, confirm the widening schism of the Four Pillars into a two – and – two – configuration. The data shows that the Commonwealth and Westpac now dominate the system growth like never before, speaking for 80 per cent of loan growth over October.” Wayne Swan approved the acquisition St George Bank by Westpac.

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    Market share of the big four banks, including BankWest and St George as at September 30 / Source: The Australian

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    Macquarie Economics Research wrote Interest Rate Outlook – Gradual gets quicker

    • “The RBA lifted the cash rate by 25bps in December. While the RBA’s view of the world has changed little since November, the news over the past month has reinforced their view that the recovery in train is on stable ground. We expect the cash rate to reach 4.50 % by the end of 2010.”

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    Reserve Bank Deputy Governor Ric Battellino is indeed very upbeat about the Australian economy in that we can expect and look forward to years of economic growth on the back of booming resources, escalating population growth with rising household incomes. The RBA is predicting a strong escalation of house prices because Australia had entered “a new upswing” that would extend its record 18 years of continuous economic expansion.

    RP Data revealed this week that house prices have doubled to an average $600,000 over the past ten years – the average Sydney house price was $300,000 back in 1999. The average price for an apartment in 1999 was $270,000 today it is $457,274.

    The latest BIS Shrapnel Residential Property Prospects report identified that residential rent are expected to rise by an average 5.8 per cent a year over the next three years. This compares with a 5.7 per cent increase in 2009 and an average annual rate of 4.4 per cent between 2002 and 2008. Throw in an electricity bill expected to rise by 60 per cent over the next three years (according to an IPART report).

    Fort Crumble was at it again and we now have our fourth premier in four years – recruitment companies would be well justified in opening up a sacked premier’s division. Now we have our first female premier – Kristina Keneally (no strings attached)! Can’t wait to see who makes up her front bench? Not that she will have any say in it! The Daily Telegraph is running a petition for an early election (To Sign)

    Last edition of Virtual Realty News for 2009 next week – the chaos of this week would be very hard to beat. Thankfully it is controlled – however we all know that elected politicians make great puppeteers.

    Cheers ^__^

    For this week’s recorded Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

    Follow Me on Twitter


    Politicians should be shouting – it’s on the house!

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    The Emperor (Kevin Rudd) was back at it again recently when he commented on Australia’s skyrocketing population and quipped “I actually believe in a big Australia. I make no apology for that.” Well, Australia actually does need apologies, because critical infrastructure advice continues to fall on the deaf ears of our elected politicians.

    After all, there must be something seriously amiss when past King of Spin, “Bobby Dazzler” Carr starts penning and pontificating on population policies in the Sydney Morning Herald. “Perish the thought that we can handle a bigger population” wrote the Dazzler “Some Australians must have felt similar estrangement when they read federal Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner’s defence of Australia’s runaway immigration targets, playfully comparing our population densities with those of Bangladesh.”

    Then the Carr crash (with accompanying air – bag), “That Tanner is one of the best minds in federal politics will only deepen the rift between 90 per cent of Australians and their political and business leadership over population policy, or rather the absence of any policy except “more”.” It would now appear that “Bobby Dazzler” is over the selective hearing condition that plagued him in his reign of the Premier State from 1995 – 2005. The transformation went from Premier State to State of Decay to Fort Crumble and even though it did not happen overnight, it is now a nightmare.

    enorth_head

    Maybe this vacant plot of land might make a nice residential subdivision with very little chance of flooding?

    www.timmooneyphotography.com

    Sydney to squeeze in 640,000 new homes by Matthew Moore – Urban Affairs Editor the Sydney Morning Herald identified “A forty per cent increase in Sydney’s population over the next 20 years means the State Government has no option but to open up scores of suburbs for new developments, according to radical proposal for Sydney to build 640,000 new dwellings.”

    For this to happen, Fort Crumble would need a plan so I went in search and found that it does not look pretty, as Andrew Clennell of the Sydney Morning Herald revealed. Rees desperate to stand for something “In this respect he hopes to get something on the radar at Macquarie Street that has been lacking for the past 12 months – POLICY.”

    They obviously can’t hear but thankfully they can read. “Number one on his list is transport. The transport blueprint that Rees promises to hand down sometime over the next three weeks is likely to be treated with some scepticism.” I guess he means this is like a homeless person entering Star City and requesting a seat at the High Rollers Table – after all Fort Crumble is broke. Back to Andrew “This is because of the large number of projects that Labor has promised, and then not delivered, in 14 years in power.”

    Oops “Bobby Dazzler” was at the helm for ten of those years – although Fort Crumble would win a wood chopping event as they sure know how to wield that political axe.

    • North West Rail link (promised in 1998 and axed)
    • North West Metro (announced and axed)
    • Bondi Beach rail link (promised then axed)
    • Parramatta to Epping rail link (halved to Epping to Chatswood rail link)
    • CBD/second Harbour crossing rail link (promised and axed)
    • F6 through southern Sydney, (on again, off again)
    • M5 duplication (long delayed)
    • M4 East extension (long delayed)

    Last month’s parliamentary pay increases and the fact that our Fort Crumble premier should be (and is) the highest “paid premier” in Australia have been vindicated. Alex Gooding had this interesting analogy on transport in the Sydney Morning Herald – Three times denied: western Sydney misses out on transport, again (great read) which really adds a poignant perspective on the political decision making processes.
    Ongoing calamities when “ Paid Premier” Nathan Rees overturned an earlier decision to contribute $45.000 million for the newly anointed AFL’s western Sydney franchise to build a new home ground – again out came that axe (perish the thought of constituents contemplating the axing our “Paid Premier”)

    Macquarie Equities Research – this week released this compelling graph in its Australian economics report. Sketching the outlook for housing “this note examines the recent trends in the housing sector and looks ahead to key factors to watch in 2010.” Looks like a tsunami to me.

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    Macquarie Equities Research – “In our view, the key factors to consider are the favourable fundamental determinants – strong population growth and constrained supply – alongside the deteriorating level of affordability. With these factors working in opposite directions, it suggests that the more extreme forecasts of a house price bubble or a price collapse will continue to prove wide of the mark.” More of this report in next week’s edition.

    Back to Andrew Clennell’s report “Sydney is experiencing transport gridlock. Public transport services in the CBD are overcrowded, even though train services are inadequate and in many suburbs non-existent. In response, transport plans are announced and then re-announced. New rail lines are proposed but then abandoned and governments blame increasing costs and global financial problems.” He did forget to mention that over the last fourteen years the NSW government also collected the highest amount of taxes in Australia’s history. In real estate terms it would be “dilapidated home – run down, neglected, yet with plenty of potential”.

    So let’s look at what is happening locally. I went to Wayne Swan’s Nation Building website to see what is happening in Mosman and North Sydney municipalities. Indeed Nation Building personified – bicycle paths, perimeter fencing, a shade structure, and a few water bubblers -no wonder our economy has rebounded with such exhilarating speed. All that it takes is a plan!

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    Our councils are doing it tough mentally and physically although they are making plenty out of parking fines as Vikki Campion reported in The Daily Telegraph. Where you’ll cop a parking fine. North Sydney Council collected $7,000,000 which was up 48 per cent from $4,700,000 and Mosman Council $1,700,000 up 89 per cent from $910,000. It should also be noted that Mosman Council has been aggressively investing in new parking meters so one could expect a significant revenue increase with this return on investment.

    In retrospect, if our population continues to explode it would then not be unreasonable to draw a conclusion that our water supplies face significant declines too (it did happen well before the proposed population explosion). Now when you renovate or build a new home, you must provide water tanks in accordance with local Council building regulations.

    So why, in any Mosman or North Sydney parks, ovals or reserves, have the respective Councils not installed water tanks? After all they have only to connect to their very own street storm water. Look at the number of parks, ovals and reserves located below street level. Balmoral Oval, Rosherville Reserve, Forsyth Park, Tunks Park, Primrose Park, Cremorne Point Reserve, Sirius Cove Reserve, Allan Border Oval, Rawson Park, Spit Reserve and Reid Park. These are but a few that are all entirely dam- dependent and coincidentally, always have their sprinklers on when it is raining.

    Warragamba Dam is presently at 55 per cent capacity and declining – although the Kurnell desalination plant is soon to be completed and that will supply up to 15 per cent of Sydney’s water. Of course we can’t leave out evaporation as this coincides with policy that has also evaporated.

    Then again I have never been one to water down an edition.

    Cheers ^__^

    For this week’s recorded Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

    Follow Me on Twitter


    Maybe our “thirty something” housing dilemma – is a false economy?

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    We all love it when a plan comes together, so spare a thought for those at Fort Crumble (NSW government) who still fail to understand a plan that actually works. We all know what happens next (as you will see) and it does not look pretty for this once proud state. A decade later those horrific and planned bureaucratic bungles are now taking a major toll – (one Fort Crumble can’t collect either). Ongoing bungles at Fort Crumble are considered to be “having a real hard go”.

    Just as ironic is that in NSW, infrastructure has moved into economic decline and as with all declines, they have a habit of gaining momentum that ends in a huge crash. On the other hand, when a government drives constituents to other states, it could be construed as its very own plan to fight housing affordability – better known as reducing demand. In a nutshell, no plan works when you apply the supply v demand economic theory, without applying the basic principles of meeting supply first. Housing in Australia is facing an interesting twist, because when the tools to meet supply are down, prices will keep rising – more a result of failed government forces.

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    Pulpit Point, Hunters Hill (a planned estate to meet supply) photographed by Tim Mooney. The vacant marina berths may well be a result of the global financial crisis. Or was this photo taken on a weekend when the residents were out relaxing on picturesque Sydney Harbour ? (Sounds like a smart plan).

    www.timmooneyphotography.com

    In past editions I have referred to the ‘thirty something factor’ in Australian housing – one third rent, the other third own with a mortgage and the final third own without a mortgage. RP Data published its Weekly Property Pulse. “Housing finance data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) this week showed that finance commitments surged during September. In particularly there was a strong bounce back in first home buyer loans which was not surprising given that it was the last month in which the First Home Buyers Grant Boost was available in full.” Bear in mind that interest rates are also increasing so here is Household Estimates 2007 – 2008 graph which makes one wonder what it will resemble after the impact of the first home buyers grants in 2009.

    19-11-2009 2-06-44 PM

    This is how it looked (prior to First Home Buyers Grant Boost) when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) was sitting around 7.25 per cent (RBA rates) and in September the cash rate was at 3.00 per cent. Currently, the cash rate is 3.50 per cent. Are the property debutantes who grabbed the grant, aware that post – global financial crisis, we are headed back to the future market? In 2010 – 11 the economy will pick up by 2.75 per cent rather than the suggested 2.25 per cent.

    19-11-2009 2-05-35 PM

    Housing and occupancy orig

    Whilst yet to be evaluated, rental property vacancy rates remain at record lows which in all probability forced many in rental markets to purchase property – the Sydney vacancy rate in October remained at 1.3 per cent. It is supposed to be 2.50 per cent to 3.00 per cent. According to RP Data, over the twelve month period, the weekly rents for houses (nationally) increased by 3.4 per cent (that was in a downturn). So why is The Emperor (Kevin Rudd) wasting money on renovating school halls when there is an obvious need to increase housing? (I will get to that shortly). However, this rental graph is simply scary.

    property-growth-graph-420x0

    In pursuit of answers, I found that the culprit (surprise – surprise) was our very own Fort Crumble when I read in the Sydney Morning Herald“NSW not a developer’s nirvana … it’s planning hell” by Aaron Gadiel. “if you were to accept everything that has been said about development in NSW, you might think it was open slather; a developer’s heaven – that planning was out of control or that, development was running rampant.”

    “Nothing could be further from the truth.”

    “It is time for a reality check.”

    “Developers are not fond of NSW. Not at all.” Based on the graph above I would suggest that those in rental accommodation would feel the same, given that when it comes to ‘bricks and mortar’ Fort Crumble is ‘as thick as a brick’ with absolutely no intellectual mortar between the layers.

    “In development terms, NSW is neither one, nor even number two. After decades of more building activity than any other state in Australia, we lost our first place ranking to Victoria in 2008. To compound the indignity, in the same year we also fell behind Queensland.” What a plan!

    “Victoria and Queensland have stolen a disproportionate share of Australia’s building investment. In the financial year ending in June, NSW accounted for only 23 per cent of Australia’s building activity, while we made up 32 per cent of Australia’s population. The Australian Bureau of Statistics only records one other occasion where NSW was anything but first – and that was in 1977.”

    So let’s look at our esteemed Premier Nathan Rees who (as he keeps telling us) is “having a real hard go.” Not sure exactly what is going in NSW aside from the government. “The economic damage to NSW from its poor performance is dramatic. The construction activity made possible by developers contributes $78 billion to the national economy each year. For every $1 million in construction expenditure, 27 jobs are created throughout the broader economy. When we lose development dollars to other states, we’re losing income and jobs that rightfully belong to NSW residents.”

    I refer you again to the above graph, “Sydneysiders have already been feeling the pinch of housing shortage. Rents in outer suburban Sydney have gone up by more than 20 per cent in the past two years. In the middle ring suburbs rents have jumped near to 30 per cent “. What a business plan.

    For our Mosman residents I jumped over to Australian Property Monitors to access the Mosman occupancy data.
    19-11-2009 3-32-41 PM
    19-11-2009 3-33-27 PM

    Fort Crumble is in total decay and Fort Fumble has absolutely NFI (No Financial Idea) as to exactly what is happening in the Australian property demographic markets. And my mantra is not to castigate – abuse or criticise our elected politicians on the astounding execution of their Nation Building expertise.

    Clip of the Week

    .
    In search, I went to YouTube – where I discovered one of the most amazing clips that signifies achievement. Unlike elected politicians, he is a man of few words yet his actions speak much louder than his few words. Backed by Delta Goodrem singing “Together We Are One” this clip should be re-played at every household and sales meeting.

    Inspiration personified – Gavin’s Bridge Climb

    Cheers

    ^__^

    For this week’s recorded Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

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    Times have changed – and politicians “FAIL” with housing!

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    Politicians are an interesting breed where on one side we have a government that finishes nothing and on the other side, an opposition that says nothing. Would it then be fair to assume that we are expected to know nothing as that way, when we see nothing, assume that something is actually happening?

    These days, The Emperor (Kevin Rudd) is better credentialled to be sales manager of Flight Centre given his vastly accruing frequent flyer points.

    With respect to The Emperor, we are spending billions on schools yet the last time I looked, nobody is living in them. So why renovate at this point? (plaques aside). It is very clear that as a matter of national urgency, Australia needs to be building housing accommodation to meet demand – our elected politicians (under the stress/threat of having to make a decision) forget that the property industry is the largest employer in Australia. Maybe they should read this article written by Stephen Lunn from The AustralianHousing stress getting worse – experts.

    greenwichpoint

    Tim Mooney Photography – Greenwich Point, Greenwich

    www.timmooneyphotography.com

    No better example when The Australian and the Melbourne Institute jointly hosted a Road to Recovery conference this week. Enter Wayne Swan who said, “We’ve got to really get going when it comes to building a supply of housing or we’ll hit capacity constraints that will hurt us in the very near future.”

    Wayne, we are already there as Australian Council of Social Service chief executive officer Clare Martin pointed out. “Some 850,000 Australians are now in housing stress, with rental costs gobbling up a high proportion of their income.”

    On top of that, the OECD announced this week that food prices in Australia have increased 41.3 per cent since the start of 2000, which then prompted a Government minister to call “for greater competition” (no solution offered) just a comment. For the record, Coles and Woolworths account for approximately 80 per cent of the Australian market.

    Back to Clare Martin “A third are low – income households. Add to that the 105,000 Australians who are homeless and you start to get a real idea of how big the problem is.” Remember that Wayne told us “we’ve got to get going” Clare Martin announced the Government’s $6.4 billion commitment to social and community housing (recently wound back by $750 million). Wayne, that is actually going backwards, “Nation Building was going to build 20,000 new dwellings (but) the outstanding need right now is 250,000 affordable homes.” The Australian reported just 73 homes so far had been completed under the Government’s spending plan. This end of the property market needs to be wound up, not back, as the top end is doing very well (Lachlan and Sarah Murdoch purchased ‘Le Manoir’ for $23 million this week).

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    La Manoir – Lachlan and Sarah Murdoch’s new Eastern Suburbs home

    .
    Economist Saul Eslake told the Road to Recovery conference, “One lingering effect of the financial crisis which is likely to exacerbate the housing shortage for some time yet to come is the difficulty which proponents of multi – unit housing developments are continuing to encounter in gaining access to finance.” So the banks lend to purchasers, yet won’t lend to developers which explains why, in Australia, multi – unit housing developments remain at historically low levels.

    Alas, a Road to Recovery where Fort Fumble (Federal government) has turned the vehicle around and is attempting to drive backwards along the recovery road (with hazard lights beaming).

    The Future Fund has around $60 billion in funds so why should it not enter the Australian property markets given the major banks’ reluctance to fund this emergency infrastructure market. It was built on selling government assets (Commonwealth and Telstra) so about time these funds were injected back into Australia.

    Why does The Emperor still allow the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) to relax regulations so that foreigners can purchase “new properties”. When “Finish Nothing” government spokesman for Assistant Treasurer Nick Sherry (he must be away too) said, despite the rule changes, the FIRB rules were designed to spur the creation of additional housing supply rather than add to affordability problems. Remember “Hogan’s Heroes”, Sgt Schultz – I know nothing!

    The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) smashed this “dumber and dumber” market assessment when it revealed this week, that fewer Australians own their homes outright and a greater number now rent (official data reflects worsening housing affordability). The Sydney Morning Herald journalist Chris Zappone wrote Home ownership down, renting up: ABS

    “The proportion of people who owned outright by their occupants has dropped from 42 per cent in 1994 – 95 to 33 per cent in 2007 – 08. Over this same period the proportion of households renting rose to 30 per cent in 2007 – 08, from 26 per cent in 1994 -95.” Bear in mind that these figures will change significantly because First Home Buyers accepted the governments (collective) bribes to enter the property markets (casualties are yet to be determined).

    Fort Fumble has wound back its boost for new and established dwellings to $3,500 from $7,000 (established) and $7,000 from $14,000 for new. At Fort Crumble (NSW government) you can collect $10,500 until the end of the year for established which then drops to $7,000 in the first half of 2010 and (steak knives) new dwellings $17,000 till the end of the year dropping to $10,000 first half of 2010.

    Over to Business Spectator (free subscription) – Housing hopes which is always a fantastic daily read.

    • The number of Australian home loans rose by 5.1 per cent in September, after a downward revised fall in August of 1.9 per cent and July -1.6 per cent. Annually, loans are 8.1 per cent higher. This is the highest number of loans since January 2008.
    • Growth was driven by loans for construction (+8.1 per cent) and loans for established dwellings (+5.0 per cent, 85 per cent of total loans). Loans for new construction are at their highest since December 1994.
    • Loans were strong across states: NSW up 7 per cent, Victoria up 3.1 per cent, QLD up 1.2 per cent, SA up 1.1 per cent and WA up 14.4 per cent.
    • First home-buyers accounted for 26.1 per cent of new loans from 24.7 per cent in but still down from the May peak of 28.5 per cent. The size of a first home-buyer loan rose to $274,600 from $270,800 in August and $260,900 in September last year.
    • Loans to investors (by value) fell 0.1 per cent after an 8.3 per cent gain in August and are 18.4 per cent higher annually.

    11-11-2009 1-28-25 PM

    Source: Crikey – Lending figures vindicate RBA’s interest rate strategy.

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    Interesting to note that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) increased the cash rate in October +0.25 per cent and +0.25 per cent November 2009. Consumer sentiment dropped 2.5 per cent in November (Movember) following consecutive interest rate rises. The Westpac – Melbourne Institute consumer sentiment index eased to 118.3 in November, from 121.4 in October, although it remained 38.3 per cent higher than last year’s level. The October rate increase saw the mortgage market contract for the first time in nineteen months from $2.9 billion in September to $2.6 billion.

    Banking prediction of the week?

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    NAB’s chief economist Alan Oster said growing consumer confidence and an improvement in business conditions had increased the likelihood of another 25 basis point increase before Christmas.

    Interesting comment. Never before has the RBA increased cash rates beyond two months in a row. Over to Big Al at the NAB “This is a pleasing result and as such, we expect there to be a 25 basis point increase in every RBA meeting till March.”

    Clip of the week?

    .
    That would be “see nothing” – when applied to border security, housing and our road to recovery at Fort Fumble. Happy 40th Sesame Street and yes, history does repeat itself as do political episodes.

    Cheers ^__^

    For this week’s recorded Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

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