COVID-19: Australian house prices fall for fifth straight month

Australian home prices eased for a fifth straight month in September, weighed down by the two largest cities of Sydney and Melbourne, though the other six capital cities enjoyed an upturn in both values and listings.

Data from property consultant CoreLogic on Thursday showed home prices across the nation slipped 0.1 percent in September from a 0.4 percent decline in August and 0.6 percent in July.

The pace of monthly declines has been slowing as coronavirus-driven mobility restrictions have lifted across much of the country.

Prices were up 4.8 percent on September 2019, reflecting the strength of the market ahead of the pandemic.

Values in the capital cities fell 0.2 percent in September, but were 4.9 percent higher on the year.

Melbourne was the major loser, with a monthly drop of 0.9 percent as the lockdown curtailed auctions and damaged buyer confidence. Sydney saw values fall 0.3 percent, compared with a 0.5 percent drop in August.

Other capital cities such as Hobart, Darwin and Adelaide, saw a 0.2 percent to 1.6 percent monthly price rise, while regional centres enjoyed a lift too.

Corelogic said the housing market outlook was subject to headwinds as fiscal support is reduced, labour markets remain weak and mortgage payment deferrals become less common.

There were some factors supporting the outlook, however.

"The aggregate effect of low mortgage rates, and the prospect that rates could fall further, low inventory levels, government incentives and improving consumer sentiment seems to be outweighing the negative economic shock brought about by the pandemic," said CoreLogic's head of research Tim Lawless.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has cut rates to just 0.25 percent and is expected to reiterate its willingness to do more if needed at a policy meeting next Tuesday.

The conservative government of Prime Minister Scott Morrison is also under pressure to come up with fresh stimulus at its October 6 federal budget as the outbreak in Melbourne clouds sentiment nationally. 

Reuters