New Zealand house prices will rise 17 per cent before peaking late next year as accelerating building activity takes time to meet the imbalance between a lack of housing stock and growing demand, says economic consultancy Infometrics.
The Wellington-based firm sees 2017 as a peak for the market. It forecasts a fall-off in demand as the rapid inflow of new migrants and Kiwis staying at home starts to ease, while new building eats into the supply shortage. From that peak, Infometrics predicts a national decline in house prices of 14 per cent in real terms by mid-2020.
That would leave house prices 11 per cent above the high they reached in 2007 after the last property boom and immediately before the global financial crisis.
"Such a sharp lift in building activity will not come without side-effects, with intense pressures on construction sector resources fuelling increases to building costs," Infometrics chief forecaster Gareth Kiernan said.
"If building activity hits the levels we are predicting then there could eventually be some softening to house prices in Auckland and regional property markets in the 'halo' around Auckland."
The rapid gain in house prices has been a contentious issue for policymakers who have seen a shortage of new housing in Auckland coincide with record levels of inbound migration, stretching the ability of low-income families to buy property. To try to keep those low rates from pushing up prices further, the Reserve Bank introduced a series of mortgage-lending restrictions in recent years and has signalled more are to come.
Infometrics' Kiernan said the RBNZ's macro-prudential tools may slow the market in the short-term but aren't a long-term solution.
"The Reserve Bank's moves last week to increase restrictions on lending to investors and low-deposit households were merely a sticking plaster on demand and are likely to have the unintended consequence of shutting some first-home buyers out of the market," he said.
"Ultimately lifting housing supply is the only way to get lasting improvements to home affordability."
A major contribution to improving Auckland's housing supply is expected this week when the city's draft unitary plan is released. Central government has laid most of the blame for the sharp increase in house prices on poor local body planning.
- BusinessDesk