The latest CoreLogic Buyer Classification data shows continued struggles for mortgaged multiple property owners, but a relatively high % share of purchases by their cash cousins. Broken down by size, it’s the smaller players that drove up mortgaged MPOs’ overall market share in the initial post-COVID burst, but they’re also now accounting for the weakness.
Mortgaged multiple property owners (MPOs, including investors) have been in the firing line lately, as Government/Reserve Bank regulation has ramped up, and the simple economics of being a landlord have also turned against them. These hurdles have included ring-fencing of tax losses, the extension of the Brightline
Test, the removal of interest deductibility, the 40% deposit requirement, and then the sharply widening gap between gross rental yields (low) and mortgage rates (high) – meaning that ‘top
ups’ are almost inevitable for anybody making a new purchase lately.
Given all of that, it’s no surprise our data has shown a low % market share of purchases for mortgaged MPOs lately (see the first chart) – and on top of that, it’s a low share in a quiet market*.
On the flipside, cash MPOs have been enjoying conditions, with their market share currently hovering at a relatively high level.
To be fair, some of these purchases won’t be cash per se, rather they’re likely to have involved the reshuffling (increasing) of debt on other properties in a portfolio, in order to free up the equity for
the latest purchase. Even so, it still stands to reason that, in the current environment of expensive and restricted credit, cash buyers would be seeing opportunities.
But what about the breakdown of investor purchasing activity by size? The second chart (overleaf) shows the overall market shares for mortgaged MPOs by number of properties owned after their
latest purchase. In other words, MPO 2 are essentially new investors – in most cases, owning their own home and just recently buying their first rental.
As can be seen, the spike in overall investor activity post-COVID was driven by smaller players, i.e. the MPO 2’s and 3-4’s. However, since early 2021, their market shares have been sliding lower, as
well as MPO 5-9 to some degree too**. This all seems logical – the ‘newbie’ investors probably had the most anxiety about all of the regulatory changes being pushed through, as well as probably
having less equity behind them, and also a greater eye on alternative ‘safer’ investments (such as term deposits, which are again starting to pay better returns).
* Just a couple of important side notes though. First, existing investors aren’t selling to
any great degree. And second, new-builds are of course still a target for investors, given
favourable deposit and tax treatment.
** That said, the slight caveat is that although MPO 2s have fallen quite sharply, they
started higher, and are still comparable to past troughs. By contrast, MPO 3-4, for
example, are below previous troughs.
By contrast, as the third chart shows, apart from the really large buyers (MPO 10+), the cash investor groups have pretty much raised their market share lately across the board – although just be
careful of the scale (the increased even for MPO 2 has only been 1%-point, from 3% in mid-2021 to 4% now).
So what might lie ahead? With credit conditions set to remain testing for a while yet – especially with formal caps on debt-to income ratios now needing to be added to medium-term considerations – cash MPOs may well hold on to a decent market share in 2023, albeit we also expect the number of property sales to stay fairly low. The converse is that the % share for mortgages MPOs looks set to continue to struggle into next year – although it also needs to be acknowledged that some would-be investors will have actively chosen to pull back, with the aim of buying something cheaper later. That time could well be 2023, if they can navigate the mortgage hurdles.
One final point, albeit something to jot down in the diary for a few years away yet, given the flurry of investor purchases in the 12 to 18 months after COVID first hit (with large capital gains
subsequently accruing), and the fact these purchases had a five year Brightline period, watch for some kind of potential sell-off in 2025-26.
Source: CoreLogic Media