Harcourts Figures: Sales Up, Listings Low
16 November 2009: Harcourts latest figures show the good volume of written sales that occurred across the country in October was not matched by the traditional upsurge in new listings normally seen in spring according to Harcourts New Zealand CEO Bryan Thomson.
This has ensured that
there remains a strong level of competition from buyers for
the available properties, he says.
“In turn this is
flowing through to the method of sale and marketing being
selected, with a continuation of high numbers of sellers
choosing high-profile auction marketing campaigns to
maximise the benefit of the present buyer competition and to
remove the risk of under or over pricing their
property.”
Commenting in the latest Harcourts
MarketWatch newsletter, Mr Thomson says that overall
Harcourts New Zealand completed 53% more written sales last
month than in October 2008, ranging from an 80% increase in
the group’s Northern region to a 31% increase in its
Wellington region.
To view the latest market watch newsletter please see the following document: http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/0911/harcourts.pdf
Mr
Thomson says the current imbalance between demand and supply
is putting upward pressure on prices and this is reflected
in Harcourts New Zealand’s figures which showed in October
that average written sales prices were up on the same month
in the previous year in three of Harcourts’ five regions,
with Harcourts’ Northern region experiencing the greatest
increase – in part due to increased activity at the higher
end of the market according to Mr Thomson.
Mr Thomson
says the amount of property on hand in October was down in
three of Harcourts’ regions when compared to the same
month last year, and it will be interesting to see what the
trend is in November.
“Looking ahead we expect
strong levels of interest from residential property buyers
to continue in the lead-up to Christmas and for this to
continue to impact on prices, to the degree of that effect
dependant on how many new listings there are. Meanwhile, in
terms of rural property, good news regarding the increased
milk solids payout to dairy farmers should have a positive
impact on the stalled farm market,” he
says.
ENDS