A new report has identified areas of Geelong predicted to outperform amid expectations an interest-rate cut would provide an immediate boost to homebuyer demand in mid-2025.
The SQM Research Boom or Bust Report predicts continued moderate falls to house prices across Melbourne of between 1 and 5 per cent in 2025 amid rising population growth and an ongoing shortage of new dwellings.
The report shows mixed results across the Geelong region, though locality ratings rose in more postcodes than declined.
RELATED: Historic farmhouse opens door to living large at Charlemont
New boom: 31 Melb and Geelong spots to get land under $500k
Which suburbs savvy unit buyers should target in Geelong
The report showed Leopold and the 3216 postcode for Belmont, Grovedale, Highton, Marshall and Wandana Heights offered the best potential to outperform all other localities over the medium term.
They scored ratings above 3.7 out of five stars in a metric that combines demographics, suburb price volatility, supply, vacancy rates, mortgage stress, long term price performance and household income growth.
Median house prices fell slightly over the past 12 months to $676,300 at Leopold and $731,000 across 3216 postcode, although a tighter rental vacancy rate saw improving returns in Leopold.
The best rental returns were seen in Corio and Norlane and the 3219 postcode for the eastern suburbs of East Geelong, Newcomb, Whittington and St Albans Park, that both achieved ratings above 3.6 out of five.
The rental vacancy rate remains locked at .8 per cent in the outer northern suburbs – the worst for renters in Geelong, while the median house price rose slightly to $478,000.
Middle ring northern suburbs across the 3215 postcode including North Geelong, Hamlyn Heights, Bell Park and Bell Post Hill also saw a median price rise to $665,000.
While the rating for Lara dipped slightly, the report showed a rising performance in the 3215 postcode, central Geelong and Newtown and the 3218 postcode for Geelong West, Herne Hill and Manifold Heights.
SQM Research has forecast an interest-rate cut of between .25 per cent to .5 per cent over mid-2025 based on the view that inflation will continue to moderate and the overall economy will continue to record below trend growth.
SQM Research managing director Louis Christopher said if interest rates are cut as forecast, this event would immediately stimulate homebuyer demand and limit the year-on-year dwelling prices falls recorded for our two largest capital cities.
“Current interest rate settings are biting the community more in the cities which on our measurements, are in overvalued territory or are experiencing slower economic growth,” Mr Christopher said.
“However, once interest rate cuts do occur, we are expecting a speedy bounce in demand for Sydney and Melbourne in particular, which both are still experiencing underlying housing shortage relative to the strong population growth rates.
“This may well mean there is a good window for buyers at this time for our two largest capital cities.”