7 posts tagged “noosa”
- 20 apartments
- oceanfront
- priced between $12M and $16M
- timeshares start at $1.5M for six weeks.
"Discounting by more than 20 per cent is commonplace for some top Gold Coast addresses and many houses and apartments are yet to sell. A property owned by the bankrupt entrepreneur Matthew Perrin sold on Albatross Avenue, in Mermaid Beach, in May for $2.75m after it was purchased for $4.375m in October 2005.
Former Sydney Swans footballer and founder of tourism group Breakfree, Tony Smith, sold his Hedges Avenue house at Mermaid Beach for $28m to IT entrepreneur Daniel Tzvetkoff - less than half the expected $60m. Now the half-finished mansion Mr Tzvetkoff purchased is to be sold after his company BT Projects was placed in administration.
Other prestige properties around the country are set to sell at sharp discounts, with many vendors shaving millions of dollars off the asking price."
See The Australian, photos and chart
The chart shows that people lost money in New Farm, Coronation Drive, Paddington, Hamilton, Hastings Street in Noosa and the Gold Coast.
"The sort of prices that were being paid were not sustainable and now we are back at 2001 and 2002 prices," Mr Fatouros said. He estimated prestige home prices have fallen about 25 per cent from their peak, with another a decrease of 10 per cent to go.
"I don't think we have seen the bottom yet," he said.
But one Gold Coast agent, who declined to be named, said there were more mortgagee sales to come. "The banks don't want to flood the market with pressured sales and are hoping for some recovery in prices," he said.
"They are drip-feeding properties on to the market."
Terry Ryder, a real estate commentator, had an interesting article in The Australian on Thursday about investing in Noosa.
"The apartment market has done even worse, delivering growth
averaging less than 2 per cent a year. The median unit price for the
Noosa region today is lower than four years ago. This kind of subnormal performance is common among popular seachange
locations -- contrary to the widely held belief that the Gold Coast and
Byron Bay are great places to invest in real estate. They may be lovely
places to live but that's a different matter. Investors want an affordable entry price, good income returns and
high capital growth -- and they're unlikely to find any of the above in
these markets."
"Of course it's not good news at the top of the market, but despite all the attention given to Mosman, Toorak, Peppermint Grove and Noosa, that's only a small fraction of total Australian housing and doesn't matter very much in the overall economic scheme of things."
"There are few more iconic sea-change destinations than the Gold Coast, which has earned a reputation as the king of population growth in Australia. But it's a long way short of being the king of capital growth.
Capital growth on the Gold Coast over the past five years has been half that achieved next door in downmarket Logan City, according to Real Estate Institute of Queensland figures.
The Moreton Bay region, a municipality that encompasses cheap mortgage-belt suburbs in Brisbane's north, has achieved considerably higher capital growth than the Sunshine Coast next door.
Within the Sunshine Coast municipality, the market leaders on capital growth are the railway towns in the hinterland (such as Beerwah and Landsborough), not the sexy coastal locations Noosa and Mooloolaba"
See Terry Ryder
From The Australian:
"The collapse does not include the almost-complete $210 million Noosa Sanctuary hotel and residences that Resort Corp is developing, to which Mirvac's Quay West hotel chain has signed up as operator.
Mr Robinson said the Noosa project remained fully funded and said all apartment pre-sales there would be honoured."
See this article in The Statesmen of India.