Building approvals change ahead

By BN | 4/03/2010 12:00:00 AM | 0 comments

The collapse of apartment approvals in January spooked many in the industry and government.

The country needs more medium density accommodation but new supply seems choked - by a lack of finance as well as by planning constraints, according to a report in the AFR.

Two weeks ago RBA governor Glenn Stevens, who early identified the shortage of development finance, pointed to a turning point in approvals for multi-unit construction.

But in January other dwelling approvals, in spite of being up almost 80% on 2009, where down 19% on the month.

Strip out the 30% of approvals related to social housing programs and the numbers look even bleaker.

There is no question about the problems of finance and planning - but January is an unusual month.

Stevens, who has pretty good property intelligence, will probably be correct.

KPMG's head of real estate and construction, Steve Gatt, says funding of developments has been affected by less active lenders, tighter lending criteria and the introduction of Basel II.

Related Story

Rising vacancy rates dim rental growth - Improved economic conditions and last years influx of first-home buyers has led to an increase in national vacancy rates that could moderate rental growth this year.

Bookmark and Share ALB

Latest Comments

E-Newsletter

enews
Our daily newsletter is FREE and keeps you up-to-date with the world of lenders, aggregators, brokers and loans.
Subscribe Today

AB issue 9.02

E-Mag

AB issue 9.02 OUT NOW
Sky’s the limit, as brokers skill up; Brokers tell ACCC to scrap mandatory MFAA; ...

view online

E-Mag Get Updated

enews
Australian Broker's e-mag provides all of the in-depth news, opinion and analysis available in our print edition straight to your inbox
Subscribe Today

Your comment

Broker news forum is the place for positive industry interaction and welcomes your professional and informed opinion.
Name

Comment


By submitting, I agree to the Terms & Conditions

You are about to submit your comment. Please ensure it is:

  • Professional
  • In your own name or pseudonym, not impersonating someone else
  • Free from offensive language
  • Free from advertising
  • Please also see our Terms & Conditions

If you prefer not to post but want to get your viewpoint across, you can always email the editor.