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.
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.
The first quarter of the year is nearly done already, and it’s been another challenging period for many of us.
While the start of the year began with such promise, with state and international borders reopening and high vaccination rates nationally, Mother Nature soon unleashed on New South Wales and Queensland.
We welcome our newest PIPA Members. PIPA Members adhere to a Code of Conduct and demonstrate their integrity, disclosure, and excellence in service provision.
With the number of rental properties already critically low, new research shows a surge in the sale of rental dwellings over the past 12 months.
The 2023 PIPA Melbourne breakfast seminar will feature an expert panel discussion on the Victorian real estate market as well as a depreciation session being held at the Intercontinental Hotel on Friday 24 November 2023.
Mark your calendars for an evening of French flair at the enchanting “Brisbane Property Investment Soiree: A Night of French Vibes” on Thursday 16th November 2023.
The Property Investment Professionals of Australia Board of Directors are pleased to invite all members to the 2023 Annual General Meeting to be held on Thursday 26th October 2023.
New legislation, increased taxation, and potential rental reforms, including rent freezes, have led to 12 per cent of Australian investors selling their properties, according to a new survey.
A quarter of Melbourne property investors sold a rental home in the past year, as the city was ranked the nation’s second worst capital to invest in. And it raises big issues for tenants.
Nearly 40 per cent of investors surveyed by a peak industry body have sold at least one Queensland rental property in the past year.
Australia is losing critical rental stock at a time when it’s needed more than ever due to record migration.
The 2023 PIPA Annual Property Investor Sentiment Survey was conducted in August 2023 and surveyed Australia’s existing and aspiring property investors.
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.
Wannabe Aussie homebuyers are being encouraged to consider alternative paths to ownership like ‘rentvesting’, or risk being locked out of the property market.