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Buyer sentiment continues to rise

Buyer sentiment continues to rise
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Home buying intentions continue to increase in light of market stabilisation and reduced interest rates, new CBA research has shown.

The latest Household Spending Intentions (HSI) Report released by Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) has shown that home buyer sentiment continues to rise.

The report utilised spending data collected by CBA as well as Google Trends data in an attempt to project where households intend to spend their money in the future across seven key spending components.

Notably, the results highlighted that the upward turn in home buying intentions, which started in early 2019, continued into August.

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Increasing auction clearance rates, coupled with the stabilisation of property prices in Sydney and Melbourne, have been labelled as contributing factors towards the shift in Australian households’ spending intentions.

In fact, the HSI report suggested that the overall sentiment for consumer spending in Australia is improving, with stable or improved consumer spending intentions indicated across all but one of the seven sectors examined.

The report indicated that the long decline in retail spending now shows signs of stabilising, albeit at lower levels than previous spending data showed.

Household spending intentions of both entertainment and motor vehicles also showed signs of stabilising. 

Spending intentions on education held at a fairly consistent level, according to the report, whereas spending on travel remained on a continuing decline.

Along with home buying intentions, spending on health and fitness appeared to be accelerating, according to the research.

The HSI Report suggested that the overall improvement in consumer spending in Australia is attributed to the impact of tax rebates and recent back-to-back interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of Australia.

The seven examined factors covered roughly 55 per cent of total household spending for Australians, with future versions of the HIS reportedly anticipated to cover more spending components.

[Related: Signs point to ‘solid selling season’: ME]

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