24 Apr 2024

First home buyers pick up quarter of properties for sale in March

5:26 am on 24 April 2024
Young woman getting keys to new apartment from realtor. Family buys, rents new house. Customers or renters buy or rent real estate, close up

First home buyers have a record market share with close to 26 percent of property purchases. File photo. Photo: 123RF

Property market conditions are set to favour first home buyers for the forseeable future, according to the latest report from CoreLogic.

The research firm's regular report into market conditions says first home buyers have held their record market share, with close to 26 percent of property purchases in March, equal to owner-occupiers looking to move on.

Chief property economist Kelvin Davidson said their relative dominance was helped by several factors.

"The most important are access to KiwiSaver for at least part of the deposit, making full use of the low deposit lending allowances at the banks... and of course relatively reduced activity from other buyer groups."

First home buyers were particularly strong in major city markets, taking 36 percent of Wellington sales, 34 percent in Hamilton and 28 percent in both Auckland and Christchurch.

Davidson said owner-occupiers looking to trade up were being held back by higher costs, including legal and removal fees, as well as a lack of choice in the type of properties they were wanting.

Investors were also being stymied by difficulties in getting bank finance, low rent yields, and - until recently - restrictive tax rules.

Davidson said factors to watch included an expected loosening of loan to value ratios (LVRs) likely to be around the middle of the year when debt to income ratios might come into force, reduced brightline tax rule, and mooted changes to bank lending rules in the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act.

"I think they're probably a story more for next year, there's a cocktail of factors... that's adding up to a view that there will be a boost to the market, but high mortgage rates will still be the key."

One question would be whether the large number of redundancies looming in the public service might lead to a rise in distressed or mortgagee sales, but Davidson said banks had shown they were flexible in helping borrowers through tough times.

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