Housing Australia
Little Housing Stock Sells in a Given Year
www.first2move.com.au
Over the 12
months to May 2017, only 4.8% of all houses nationally actually sold
highlighting just how little stock sells in a given 12 month period.
Across
house sales over the past 12 months, Tasmania saw the highest proportion of
stock turning over with 5.6% of all houses in the state selling. Conversely, Western Australia saw the lowest
proportion of turnover with just 4.0% of all houses selling over the past
year.
The low
volume of housing stock which actually turns-over highlights why caution should
be taken when looking at median sale prices.
Because of the low sample a median is based off they can be biased. Furthermore, they may not be reflective of
the whole market and when you compare between periods they may compare two very
different bundles of housing types and quality.
The table
provided highlights the five suburbs in each state which have seen the greatest
turnover of houses over the past year.
Only those suburbs that have at least 500 houses have been included on
the list.
Zuccoli in
Darwin had the highest proportion of stock turning-over across the country with
38.5% of all houses in the suburb selling over the past year. Note that Zuccoli is a relatively new,
under-developed suburb of Darwin which is seeing substantial new housing
injections. Clyde North in Melbourne had
the second-highest level of turnover with 17.6% of all houses in the suburb
selling over the past year.
Even though
the table details the suburbs with the greatest turnover of houses, each of the
suburbs listed have seen substantially less than half of all houses
selling.
Another
characteristic of the list is that most of the suburbs shown are areas where
there is or has been over recent years, a substantial injection of new housing
stock. This is also reflected in average
hold period data which shows that in new housing estate areas housing stock
tends to turnover with greater regularity.
Overall,
housing turnover in any given year reflects only a small proportion of the
total housing stock. It further
highlights that taxes on transactions such as stamp duty are heavily reliant on
collection from only a small pool of overall housing stock.
(Source:
CoreLogic )
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