Floods add to the looming rental crisis 

Flooding damages homes

Australia is facing a rental crisis that has been exacerbated by the recent flooding events, according to Pete Wargent, co-founder of Australia’s first national marketplace for buyer’s agents, BuyersBuyers.

Mr Wargent said, “rental markets were already in a tightening cycle. The floods in New South Wales and Queensland have added further pressure in certain markets, such as the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, where there was already a housing shortage, and for family-suitable housing in Brisbane.”

“All of the eight capital cities were already seeing a trend decline in vacancy rates with the honourable exception of Darwin, while many regional markets are, practically speaking, at full capacity” Mr Wargent said. 

Figure 1 – Rental vacancy rates

“Brisbane saw an estimated 15,000 homes flooded in this event, rendering potentially thousands of homes uninhabitable, and vacancy rates were already at decade lows there too. So the disruption is going to cause a good deal of friction in the rentals market.”

“More broadly, nationally the rental vacancy rate has fallen to around 1 per cent for the first time in over a decade-and-a-half, and there are further declines in the post as the international borders finally reopen and as total employment surges to record highs at over 13½ million this year” Mr Wargent said. 

Building crunch

BuyersBuyers CEO Doron Peleg said fewer new homes will be completed in 2022 as building approvals decline and the rising cost of materials and construction labour discourages development.

Mr Peleg said, “not only are financing costs set to rise but the cost of building materials and trades labour has also already jumped. The problem when you have a disaster with widespread impact such as flooding over two states is that this typically adds further pressure to the cost of labour and materials.”

“The HomeBuilder stimulus package was successful in getting more homes built for a period of time – and major renovation activity has been running hot – but approvals are now dropping away.”

Figure 2 – Detached house approvals by capital city

“Furthermore, there is considerably less demand from overseas investors, which means that attached dwelling approvals, in particular for high-rise unit developments, have failed to gain as much traction through this market cycle” Mr Peleg said. 

Figure 3 – Attached dwelling approvals by capital city

Construction insolvencies inevitable


BuyersBuyers co-founder Pete Wargent said, “the recent announcement that Probuild may be heading into administration appears likely to be canary in the coalmine for the construction sector.

Mr Wargent said, “profit margins are typically thin for developers and overlapping supply shocks have put a great deal of pressure on the cost of materials and labour.”

“Insolvencies have been exceptionally low for two years in the construction sector, but we can see that is now already changing, and further insolvencies will see many projects left incomplete as funding costs rise.”

Figure 4 – Construction insolvencies by state

“Overall, there were already a range of factors which were conspiring to put a good deal of pressure on rental markets.” 

“Talk of potential hikes in interest rates will naturally tilt the balance from buying to renting for many marginal households, and with landlords less eager to invest then the result is likely to be a rental crisis and double-digit growth in rental prices” Mr Wargent said.

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