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.
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The first quarter of this year has been characterised by diverse market conditions around the nation, according to PIPA members.
The sell-off of investment properties around the nation is continuing unabated and is fuelling fears of an even tighter rental market with higher holding and compliance costs as well as new property taxes to blame.
The first six months of this year has seen a continuation of robust market conditions in most major markets, with the exception of Melbourne.
When something awful is happening to a lot of people, it helps if those in charge have someone to conveniently blame. Investors of Australia, this is where you come in.
Freeing up and incentivising investor clients to increase property supply has been proposed as the answer to Australia’s rental crisis by the managing director of a national quantity surveying group.
Australia’s housing boom has sparked a “flood” of social media influencers and spruikers portraying themselves as qualified property experts to make a quick buck, a peak body has warned.
An influx of new entrants into the property investment sector over recent years has flooded the market with inexperienced and untrained “faux” advisers, according to PIPA.
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According to new research by PIPA, only 27% of investors were women and the current housing market conditions are providing opportunities for women to invest and improve their financial conditions.
Surging interest rates. Falling property prices. Rising rents. One out of three pieces of welcome news does not deliver a stellar outlook for Australia’s 2.2 million real estate investors this year.
Soaring rents and a lack of properties to lease have become a crisis across Australia in the last 12 months. Nationally, rents rose 6.7 per cent to a median of $495 per week in 2022, but the issue was much worse in capital cities.
We welcome our newest QPIA® Accredited Members who hold the highest form of industry-recognised, specialist training and can be trusted to provide tailored and unbiased advice to consumers.
Savvy property investors are likely to re-enter the market in 2023 after a year in which many quit because of fast-rising interest rates and high prices, experts predict.
A tough run all round for Aussie property in 2022. The RBA has hiked interest rates for eight consecutive months, taking the cash rate from 0.10 per cent to 3.10 per cent and that’d be reason enough.
2022 came off the back of 2021, where steep prices rises were seen. Experts agree the rental crisis will worsen, and it is likely we are nearing the end of the rapid interest rate rise cycle. Some experts believe house prices will actually rise next year.
Despite tighter lending conditions and interest rate rises, two brokers say there is no slowdown in the number of investors entering the property market.