Lower home values in Melbourne and Sydney continue to weigh down the national housing market while the remaining capitals record a lift through September

September marked a striking turn in housing market sentiment; consumer confidence increased, new listings rose, and six of the eight capital cities recorded a rise in home values over the month. However, falling values in Melbourne and Sydney, which make up approximately 40% of Australian’s housing stock by number and 55% by value, pushed the national reading into a fifth straight month of decline.

CoreLogic’s September home value index results showed a 0.1% fall in dwelling values nationally. This was comprised of a 0.2% drop in the combined capitals index and a 0.4% rise in the combined regionals index.  Although the national index was down over the month, the 0.1% decline was the smallest since values started to reduce in May this year.

According to CoreLogic’s head of research, Tim Lawless, Melbourne remains the main drag on the headline results.  “By far the weakest result across the capital cities, Melbourne housing values were down 0.9% in September.  Since peaking in March, Melbourne values are down 5.5%. With restrictions starting to lift and private home inspections once again permitted, we expect to see activity lift in October.”

The rate of decline across Sydney’s market has been consistently easing since July, and the remaining capital cities have all returned to some level of growth.

Regional markets have continued to out-perform relative to the capital cities. At a broad level, the combined regionals index has slipped only 0.8% since March while capital city values have fallen by 2.6% over the same period. In September, every ‘rest of state’ region, except Western Australia, recorded a lift in housing values.

Mr Lawless believes the resilience in regional values can be attributed to a number of factors. “From a cyclical perspective, regional areas weren’t recording the same growth conditions pre-COVID, so home values in these markets are often more affordable, and don’t have a high base to fall from. Anecdotally we are also observing a transition of demand away from the cities towards the major regional centres, particularly those that are adjacent to the larger capitals where residents can commute back to the cities if required. Remote working arrangements are no doubt a factor in supporting demand in these markets, but lifestyle opportunities and a desire for lower density housing options are also playing a part.”

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