'Mirvac most at risk': Apartment warning to big property...

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    'Mirvac most at risk': Apartment warning to big property players

    By Simon Johanson & Carolyn Cummins
    30 January 2019 — 1:29pm

    Australia’s largest property players face an escalating risk of buyers failing to pay at settlement time because of falling apartment and land prices, analysts say.

    In a gloomy outlook for the country’s largest real estate developers, UBS says Mirvac, Lendlease and Stockland face a higher risk of settlements falling over because of their exposure to projects sold to buyers at the 2017 peak of the property cycle.

    “We see Mirvac as most at risk followed by Lendlease and Stockland,” analysts Grant McCasker and James Druce said.

    Australia is in the midst of a property slump with apartment prices falling 7 per cent in Sydney and 2 per cent in Melbourne.

    A crane at Mirvac’s Harold Park  apartment  project in  the inner-Sydney suburb of Glebe.

    A crane at Mirvac’s Harold Park apartment project in the inner-Sydney suburb of Glebe. CREDIT:AFR


    Lending is down 22 per cent from its peak as the big four banks tighten the screws on investors, raising standard variable interest rates and ramping up scrutiny of borrower’s applications.

    Apartment sales make up a significant chunk of earnings for Mirvac, in particular, over the next three financial years. In 2020, more than a third of the group’s earnings will come from settlements in Sydney and Melbourne.

    The most at risk projects are in Sydney’s Marrickville and Olympic Park which “appear already out of the money” because Sydney’s apartment price index has fallen 5 per cent since launch, the analysts said.

    St Leonards could also become an issue were prices to fall a further 5 to 10 per cent.

    “We are less concerned about Lendlease's settlement risk given the price growth since the 2015-16 launch dates,” Mr McCasker and Mr Druce said.


    Another major developer, Stockland, has far less exposure to the apartment market but is banking on substantial earnings from house and land sales.

    The number of buyers cancelling contracts on land purchases is presently low, but UBS warns that tightening credit, price falls, incentives and lower deposits will increase the number of struggling buyers.

    There has been a documented rise in speculative land buyers trying to offload their purchase contracts on Gumtree and other sites, which adds to the risks.

    “We expect Stockland's second half settlements to disappoint as cancellation rates increase and settlement times extend,” UBS said.


    Property experts believe there is more pain to come for the sector.

    SQM Research’s property analyst Louis Christopher said, despite recent falls, Sydney and Melbourne’s property market are still overvalued.

    “This downturn still has some legs to run yet,” he said Tuesday.

    “Sydney and Melbourne remain heavily overvalued despite the price falls that have happened, there is an election just a few months away where negative gearing is at play, and the banks are still being very draconian on providing loans to the market.”

    “We think there will be more price declines,” he said.

 
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