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Friday, 13 September 2013

"Inquiry rates for granny flats soar in WA"

"INQUIRY rates for granny flats have soared this year and they're not all planned as a home for older relatives.
Specialist builders say there has been “a substantial increase” in the number of people asking about ancillary accommodation or “granny flats’’ since the State Government announced in March it would change legislation to allow the flats to be rented to non-relatives.

Investment experts said the legislation changes, gazetted on August 2, would be a “game changer’’ for Perth.

Granny flat builders, including Granny Flats WA, Granny Flat Innovations, Concept Steel Constructions and Factory Direct, have all noted the “dramatic increase” in inquiries.

Granny Flat Innovations general manager Chris Johnston said the hits on the firm’s web page had tripled since the Government’s announcement.

And Granny Flats WA managing director Mike Nicholls said the interest was coming from homeowners and investors.

“Most interest is from people 55 to 75 looking to rent out their larger house,” Mr Nicholls said.

“But the rental market is bringing in the younger demographic who want to put granny flats on their investment properties and double their income.

“There have been a lot of inquiries from FIFO workers.”

Sales, however, had yet to pick up.

Factory Direct general manager Trevor Massey said the market was still in the “research phase”.

“It’s like building a house. The first step is research,” said Mr Massey, who predicted an increase in sales in the coming months.

Hegney Property Group chief executive Gavin Hegney said the new legislation would be a “game changer” that would increase housing densities in Perth suburbs built in the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s.

“The knock-on effect of more people in those suburbs would mean the local businesses would grow,” he said.

“Where previously those suburbs may not have been able to support a cafe, they might be able to with increased density.”

Mr Hegney said that if the trend developed as expected, blocks of more than 450sq m would become increasingly popular.

Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins, who held a sold-out investment seminar last Tuesday featuring the new granny flat laws, predicted the accommodation would be popular with investors chasing higher yields.

He tipped properties with granny flats in “decent areas” to attract yields of 7 per cent.

“You won’t have to go into risky areas, like mining towns, to get those yields,” Mr Collins said.

A new granny flat as an investment property would also have tax depreciation benefits, he said.

Mr Hegney said there would be significant financial gains for investors, with an estimated 14 per cent return on the costs of establishing a granny flat.

“It can turn a negatively, or neutrally geared property, into a positively geared property,” Mr Hegney said.

Granny flats could be a wise long-term investment, helping to pay the mortgage initially, before being used as crash pad for teenagers, and then for extra retirement income in later years.

But he warned that if even a portion of the family home was used to provide an income, it would affect the property’s capital gains tax-free status.

“People will need to look at their own financial circumstances and decide what’s right for them,” Mr Hegney said.

Real Estate Institute of WA president David Airey said people would also get tax exemptions for maintenance on that part of their property, as they would for any investment.

But he said homeowners should do their homework because they were not likely to get the same investment return on a granny flat as they would on a property on a separate strata title.


CORNERING THE INVESTMENT MARKET

A CORNER block with a three-bedroom, two-bathroom house would be the ideal investment property to add a granny flat to, according to Hegney Property Group boss Gavin Hegney.

“Some properties are better suited than others,” Mr Hegney said.

“It’s pretty hard to go past a three-bedroom, two-bathroom with a 1x1 granny flat.

“The value of that property would stand on its own right.

“A corner site would be best, because both could have a street frontage.”

Mr Hegney warned investors to be aware that the cost of a granny flat would not always be equal to the value it added to the property.

A two-bedroom, one-bathroom granny flat added to a four-bedroom, two-bathroom home may not equal a six-bedroom, three-bathroom home, Mr Hegney said.

Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins said investors would also have to consider an area’s demographics and planning codes to determine whether a granny flat suited their property.

“You need to think who the prospective clients are,” Mr Collins said.

“If it’s a 4x2 and in a family area, the renters might really value that backyard,” he said.

“If it’s an older three-bedroom, one-bathroom shared by a couple or three adults, they may not.”


A RING OF POTENTIAL

THE best areas for granny flats are in Perth’s “middle-belt”, where many homes were built in the 1960s and 1970s, Hegney Property Group chief executive Gavin Hegney said.


He said these areas had big blocks, good tenant demand, and rental returns that could soon cover the initial cost outlay.

“If you drew a ring around the city, it would be areas like Melville, Bull Creek, Leeming, Kardinya, Queens Park, Belmont, Bassendean, Morley, Dianella, parts of Maylands, Balcatta and Osborne Park,” Mr Hegney said.

Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins said granny flats would not work as well in higher priced areas, such as the Western suburbs, where they would probably devalue the property.

“There will be demand for this kind of housing in a lot of areas – people are happy to live in smaller homes these days,” Mr Collins said.

“But you need to understand who the target market is.

“They’ll be popular with fly-in, fly-out workers who want lock-up-and-leave properties, or in student areas, such as around Curtin (university) and ECU.”"


This article was sourced from PerthNow and was written by Claire Bickers.

Friday, 6 September 2013

"House prices fall after sales rush"

"A rush of first-homebuyers in the past three months has triggered a dip in Perth's median house price, figures to be released today suggest.

The Real Estate Institute of WA's monthly snapshot for last month also revealed a 9 per cent rise in rental vacancies in the past three months, prompting forecasts of lower rents.

Sales figures for the three months to the end of last month suggest first-homebuyer activity is "strongly" affecting the market, with the median house price falling 1.4 per cent to $515,000, compared with the three months to May.

"This appears to be due to the large turnover of more affordable homes skewing the median downwards," REIWA president David Airey said.

Most homes were sold in the north-west and southern parts of the City of Wanneroo, with sales increasing between 31 and 36 per cent. Sales rose 21 per cent in Bayswater and Bassendean but turnover in Joondalup fell 20 per cent.

At the end of last month, 9237 properties were listed for sale, up 5 per cent on July, according to REIWA.

However, the institute is warning of reduced land supply after the number of blocks for sale fell 18 per cent.

The overall median Perth rent was unchanged at $475 but for flats, units and apartments it increased by $5 to $460 a week. Rental vacancies are at a three-year high, 75 per cent up on the same time last year.

Mr Airey said he expected median rents to soften in the September quarter.

He said it was too early to gauge the effect of the State Government's move last month to cut the first-homebuyers grant to $3000 for existing homes.

Sally Palmer, from Homehunters Realty in Dianella, said demand in Bayswater from first-homebuyers was the strongest she had seen.

"Mt Lawley and Inglewood are becoming fairly expensive so the next step is Bayswater," she said. "It has lots of good schools, is close to the city, shops and parks and it is a family-oriented suburb.""
 
This article was sourced from The West Australian and was written by Rhianna King.
 
 

Friday, 30 August 2013

"Perth leads nation in real estate growth"

"PERTH has experienced its strongest winter residential sales season for seven years, new figures show.            
Home values across the city jumped by 3.8 per cent throughout the season up to August 26, RP Data figures show.

RP Data senior research analyst Cameron Kusher said Perth’s growth for the year to date (8.3 per cent) was currently leading the nation.

“It is important to keep in mind that winter is usually a slow period for the housing market in Perth,” Mr Kusher said.

“Of course, winter isn’t finished quite yet but if we look at the past five years it is shaping up as the strongest over that period."
Perth's fastest selling suburbs revealed

Values increased by just 0.2 per cent in winter 2012 and fluctuated in 2011 (-3.1 per cent), 2010 (0.2 per cent), 2009 (1.9 per cent), and 2008 (-1.8 per cent). 

Perth’s median house price is currently $510,000 and the median unit price is currently $425,000, according to RP Data.

“If the 3.8 per cent growth to-date holds for the remainder or winter, it will be the strongest winter for the Perth housing market since values rose by 10.0 per cent in winter 2006,” Mr Kusher said.

Finding Perth's hidden property gems"


This article was sourced from PerthNow and was written by Claire Bickers.

Friday, 23 August 2013

"Perth readers say 'no' to local government amalgamations"

"MOST residents across Perth are against the State Government's controversial council amalgamations plan.

More than 2400 people responded to a PerthNow poll on the plan to more than halve the number of councils in the metropolitan area (from 30 to 14).
The question was: Are you happy with the changes to your local council area?
The collated results show relatively narrow margins for approval of the plan in some areas.
The poll voting showed:
Yes 37.2%
No 47.9%
I don't care 14.9%
Within the "super-council'' mudmap, only four areas voted in favour of the mergers  however, these included Rockingham, Joondalup and Wanneroo which are being left intact under the plan and are consequently unaffected.
The only region in which a merger was favoured by poll respondents was Bassendean-Bayswater.

Residents across the metropolis are galvanising to voice their concerns with aspects of the merger ultimatum.
Vincent will be holding a second public meeting on Thursday at the Woodville Reserve. It believes its push to be merged entirely with the City of Perth (rather than half going to Stirling) was endorsed by Premier Colin Barnett through the week, if the City of Perth also backed the move.
A public meeting in heritage-sensitive Mount Lawley is being held at the Astor Theatre on Beaufort St on Wednesday, August 28 at 7pm.
Fremantle will hold a community rally at the Fremantle Arts Centre from 2pm on Sunday September 1. A petition is also being compiled.
The area results (in percentages):
Cambridge/Claremont/Western suburbs
Yes 37.6
No 47.0
I don't care 15.4
Stirling
Yes 33.0
No 55.9
I don't care 11.1
Armadale/Serpentine/Jarrahdale
Yes 38.3
No 46.3
I don't care 15.4
Perth
Yes 31.8
No 56.7
I don't care 11.5
Bassendean/Bayswater
Yes 46.0
No 33.0
I don't care 21.0
East Fremantle/Fremantle/Melville
Yes 39.4
No 49.4
I don't care 11.2
Canning/Gosnells
Yes 36.6
No 47.6
I don't care 15.8
Cockburn/Kwinana
Yes 37.7
No 51.3
I don't care 11.0
South Perth/Victoria Park
Yes 34.4
No 54.3
I don't care 11.3
Belmont/Kalamunda
Yes 35.8
No 47.5
I don't care 16.7
Mundaring/Swan
Yes 40.2
No 42.5
I don't care 17.3
Joondalup
Yes 40.4
No 34.2
I don't care 25.4
Wanneroo
Yes 44.6
No 28.7
I don't care 26.7
Rockingham
Yes 50.5
No 29.0
I don't care 20.5"

This article was sourced from Perth Now and was written by Mara Fox.