UBS forecasts house price growth to moderate to 6 per cent by the end of this year and slow to 3 per cent in 2016.
House prices rose 9 per cent in the year to April, led by a 15 per cent jump in Sydney.
"Given that rate cuts are more likely than rate hikes over the coming year, and the labour market is proving resilient, albeit we still expected unemployment to increase again to 6.5 per cent, we doubt that house prices will fall in the near-term," the reports said.
House prices are growing much faster than household income but UBS says as that is being offset by rates falling to record lows, the mortgage repayment share of household income remains around average.
"The catalyst for a significant house price correction from either rising interest rates, a significant rise in unemployment or clear housing oversupply, all appear absent at this stage," UBS says.
The federal government is cracking down on foreign investment in housing but UBS says the policy changes are likely to only modestly diminish the strong underlying foreign demand for Australian housing.
- AAP