The steam continued to come out of the Auckland property market in January, being the only region to report a drop in house sales and a further slowing in annual price inflation as regulatory curbs dim demand in the country's biggest city and the government continues to free up more land in special housing areas.
The number of houses sold in Auckland fell 14 percent to 1,764 in January from the same month a year earlier, according to Real Estate Institute of New Zealand figures. Across the country, the number of sales rose 4.3 percent to 5,048 in January, and excluding Auckland, that number was up 15 percent as buyer demand spilled over to Northland, Waikato and the Bay of Plenty.
The REINZ figures showed the national median price rose 5.2 percent to $448,000 in January from a year earlier, with new records set in Hawke's Bay and Taranaki. Auckland prices were up 9.1 percent to $720,000 in January from a year earlier, lagging behind gains in Waikato/Bay of Plenty, Hawke's Bay, Central Otago and Otago, which all registered double digit growth on an annual basis.
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"Auckland continues to show declining sales numbers. However, the reasons are many and varied, including an increasingly large group of potential sellers who are unable to find suitable new properties," REINZ chief executive Colleen Milne said in a statement. That's "a reflection of the very tight listings position in Auckland and increasingly tight listings across the rest of the country."