Market leading knowledge & insights to help you live your property dream
PIPA is recognised as an authoritative source of property market analysis, research, and is a regular commentator in media nationwide.
PIPA is recognised as an authoritative source of property market analysis, research, and is a regular commentator in media nationwide.
The PIPA Adviser is a quarterly industry e-magazine that features the latest industry news, research, state market analysis, and PIPA happenings, including upcoming events, member profiles, and media mentions.
For more information, feedback, or to feature in the PIPA Adviser, please contact us.
Startling new research shows hundreds of thousands of rental properties have been stripped from rental markets around the nation with investors offloading properties in Victoria and Queensland in particular – the states leading the war on private landlords.
Since the last edition, our sector has unfortunately been hit with a variety of new attacks on investors – seemingly as a way to reduce rental prices. PIPA has been publicly representing the interests of members and consumers in each one of these investor strikes and will continue to do so, thanks to the continued support of our members.
With an influx of new entrants flooding the industry, inexperienced and untrained ‘faux’ advisers are on the rise. Stay ahead of the game and learn how to navigate this landscape with our expert insights and analysis.
Our 2022 PIPA Annual Investor Sentiment Survey created a national media frenzy when it was released in late September.
It also produced the first dataset that shows what has happened to rental supply – investors have offloaded their properties in the hundreds and thousands.
Since the last issue, we have seen a new Federal Government installed, rising interest rates, and softening market conditions.
However, members are reporting solid client enquiry with plenty of savvy property buyers and investors perhaps waiting for market conditions to change before entering, or returning, to the market.
New land taxes aimed at small investors threaten to flatten Melbourne’s property market.
The Property Investment Professionals of Australia have elected two new board directors in Newcastle-based MCG Quantity Surveyors Managing Director Mike Mortlock and Melbourne-based Cate Bakos Property Director Cate Bakos.
The Tea Tree Gully LGA which takes in 27 suburbs, is constantly in demand for its quality lifestyle within minutes of the acclaimed Adelaide Hills.
Property manager Carmen Littley says she has lost 52 investor clients since the Victorian government targeted landowners with extra levies in its budget last year, which she describes as the “final nail in the coffin” for many owners.
Without them, the rental crisis would be a whole lot worse. Love your landlord. I know that sounds like heresy but tenants should direct their anger towards all three levels of government – not their landlords – when it comes to skyrocketing rents.
The number of ex-rental homes being listed for sale has jumped 30% in a year as investors buckle under high interest rates and increasing regulation, new data shows.
The Victorian Liberals and Nationals economic team are continuing to consult widely with the community to develop a more efficient and fairer tax system for all Victorians, hosting public hearings at State Parliament.
Intense debate surrounds negative gearing and capital gains tax (CGT) concessions and their role in Australia’s housing market.
This week we start to present a balanced view of the property market. Over the next few weeks we will feature a range of respected property professionals and proven industry commentators from Bricks & Mortar Media’s annual property market forecast report that has just been released.
Brisbane-based Melinda Jennison established Streamline Property Buyers, which has a simple ethos of helping people make sound property investment decisions, in 2017 after a career in academia that included cystic fibrosis research.
Maureen is in Australia’s top income bracket but still can’t afford to buy the home she lives in. Here’s the grim salary experts say you need for an average house.
Fiddling with negative gearing and capital gains tax (CGT) discounts could cost Australia up to $58 billion over a decade and send the overstretched rental market spiralling further, according to new research by the Property Investment Professionals of Australia.