Impact of rules revealed

Monday 24 February 2014

Napier and Wellington have experienced the biggest drops in first-home buyer numbers since the loan-to-value restrictions kicked in, Property IQ data shows.

Both have reported a drop of 5.4% in first-home buyers since the rules took hold.

In Wellington, first-timers had made up 26.8% of the market. After the rules were introduced, they made up 21.4%.

In Napier, their numbers fell from 21.2% to 15.8%.

The North Shore reported the biggest fall of the Auckland regions, of 2.2%. 

Most major centres reported a drop but some areas started to see more first-home buyers after the rule change.

Upper Hutt had 4.3% more and Palmerston North 1.6% more, Property IQ said, supporting anecdotal evidence that buyers were starting to look further afield. “Waimakariri is also up while Christchurch and Selwyn are both down, and this could represent a similar trend.”

For most of the past two years, the percentage of sales to first-home buyers has been about 20%.

In December that dropped to 19% and in January it dropped further to 18%. Property IQ said the number of first-home buyers currently in the market was lower than any month since late 2010 or early 2011.

The percentage of first-home buyers purchasing property increased in September and October, which Property IQ said was probably a response to the signals that the rules were about to be introduced.

The numbers during that period were still down on the first-home buyer activity reported earlier in the year.

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Sign In / Register to add your comment

House Prices

Slow growth trend takes hold

Property values around most of the country continued to increase in 2017 but the rate of growth has slowed to a crawl and sales have plummeted.

Commercial

Listed property trusts uncovered

For investors wanting to diversify their portfolios, listed property trusts (LPTs) are worth looking into but it pays to find out how they work first.

Mortgages

Growth outlook overshadows OCR call

New Zealand’s lower economic growth was acknowledged by the Reserve Bank in its OCR statement today – which means there's a chance their next call could be more doveish.

Site by PHP Developer