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Old 03-03-2024, 10:54 AM   #2941
kevino
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

Go onto any IGA and there will be loss leaders esp chicken meat dairy.
One near me had lamb legs around 7 or 8 $ a kilo.
Get em in to buy the basics and pray they buyer higher margin priced stuff at the same time.
Good business tactic.
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Old 04-03-2024, 10:16 AM   #2942
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

I go to IGA to buy $9 per kg rump slabs and $12 scotch and then go to Coles for others. Although i notice that IGA bananas are often < $3 kg where as Coles standard now is $4, at least IGA is local money.
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Old 05-03-2024, 04:11 PM   #2943
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

Quote:
Originally Posted by raised by monkeys View Post
I go to IGA to buy $9 per kg rump slabs and $12 scotch and then go to Coles for others. Although i notice that IGA bananas are often < $3 kg where as Coles standard now is $4, at least IGA is local money.
IGA has some of the best deals on meat, there is an IGA where I go for work once a week and I usually drop in and buy steak and chicken if they have the deals on.

Not only that, the meat is better quality than the other two criminal corporations where I NEVER buy meat.

The only other place I get meat is Aldi, Pork mince under $8 a kilo (great for taco's pasta, lasagna, Asian Mince Recipes etc) and I get the burger mince for home made hamburgers.


Quote:
Originally Posted by T3rminator
False. Worked for a retailer that did deals and stunts to bring customers in, hoping sale of other goods will more than make up for a single product, and then there is the prospect of repeat business.
Yes, but a bit different to just selling stuff at a loss.


Quote:
Originally Posted by T3rminator
Who am I to argue with the butcher?
They affectionately call our local butcher 'The Rap!$t', and the title is well deserved for his predatory pricing.

I would not believe a word he utters and I do not give him my money.

He has also been known to steal meat when doing kills for local farmers. Local farmers recently discovered that they consistently get an additional 30-40kg of meat per animal when sent to the abattoir than when he processes them.

But all that is getting very off topic.
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Old 05-03-2024, 05:07 PM   #2944
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

So where does the RBA shop to get their "basket of goods" prices to calculate inflation?

By the sounds of it, certainly not IGA.
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Old 05-03-2024, 05:28 PM   #2945
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

Thomas Dux?

More on-topic, a friend took a bath on his tidy and central inner-city studio auction last weekend. Reserve 400, sold after the auction (same day, on site) for barely 360. Part of me thinks maybe the market is down, part of me wonders if the agent hustled him just to close a sale.
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Old 21-04-2024, 02:33 PM   #2946
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

Been looking at house and land packages with the possibility of signing up to one in a few months. They had been what looked like good value compared to sale prices of existing housing stock.
The areas I’m looking at in WA for new builds have increased in price $100-200k across the board over the last 4-6 weeks or so.
Unsure if the increases are justified or home builders are cashing in on a heated market that has seen gains in existing dwellings over the past few years.
And if this has been the case in other states?

One thing it has done is lowered the appeal of a new builds with a potential 18-36 month build time and the associated stress and variation cost blow out that come with it.
Easier to buy an existing house, pay stamp duty and be done with it.
One more contributor to add to the housing shortage I guess.
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Old 21-04-2024, 03:11 PM   #2947
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

You should buy this place smoo:

https://www.realestate.com.au/news/g...tom-cabinetry/
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Old 21-04-2024, 03:44 PM   #2948
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Quote:
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That is well out of my price range. And since it is Melbourne I’d also need to fill the front yard with American pick ups to trigger the libs and become reddit famous.
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Old 22-04-2024, 11:33 AM   #2949
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

Just to remind people, the NCC (national construction code) in Australia is about to change for all new homes that will require 7 Star energy assessments in the coming months. This means that all new homes will need a higher level of thermal performance to comply with council approval.

What this means, is that the cost of new homes will be increasing due to the requirements needed to meet this new 'green' target for all new construction. Inadvertently, the costs of building a home could vary in pricing of up to $30k or more depending on design.

Careful and clever design practice by Builders, Building Designers and Architects is required more than ever to minimize these costs in conjunction with local council and estate encumbrance regulations.

Some states already have implemented this plan already. But it will soon be Australia wide and builders will then be forced to pass on any additional costs incurred to the owner to meet the minimum requirements on top of an already expensive and life changing purchase.

https://ncc.abcb.gov.au/news/2022/bu...s-and-guidance
https://thefifthestate.com.au/innova...ew-7-star-ncc/

Quote:
What are recent changes in the NCC 7-star program?
The NCC (National Construction Code) 7-star changes refer to an increase in minimum energy efficiency building standards for new homes from 6 to 7 stars under the National Construction Code 2022. This change aims to make homes more comfortable to live in, cost less to heat and cool, and help reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The new energy efficiency provisions for NCC 2022 allow for flexibility across design, materials, and orientation.

Key points regarding the NCC 7-star changes:

The increase to minimum standards for new homes will be introduced from 1 October 2023 in most states and territories.
The new energy efficiency provisions for NCC 2022 allow for flexibility across design, materials, and orientation and do not place any specific restrictions on window size.
The style of window, type of glazing, window coverings, and external shading are ways that windows can be made to be more energy efficient without compromising on size.
There will be a transition period before the mandatory introduction of the new minimum 7-star standard for new homes. The changes will not be compulsory for homes that have a building permit issued before 1 May 2024.
The new minimum requirement for new homes is a rating of 7, which means a higher level of thermal performance. Thermal performance is essentially how well your building uses and stores energy for heating and cooling.
The new energy efficiency and condensation mitigation requirements will commence in Victoria on 1 May 2024. The changes will make homes cheaper to run, more comfortable to live in, and more resilient to extreme weather.
These changes are expected to result in more comfortable and energy-efficient homes, contributing to a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and promoting sustainable living.
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Old 22-04-2024, 11:56 AM   #2950
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Default Re: Australia housing bubble

As so often, a bunch of waffle in its final iteration.

There’s still no meaningful steps towards sustainability in preliminaries, no mandated recyclability standards for incorporated materials, no enforceable and meaningful green space requirements, no commensurate spot penalties.

It’s going to be more of typical Australia; gaming the system while avoiding more actual work. Once consumers are exposed to these costs the bleating will commence: “Nobody told us!” (never mind they could have done their own research) and companies “We need more time to comply, and our struggling customers need a break in government fees”…

So we’ll see an uptick in imported materials of alleged but questionable compliance (there will be zero enforceability when breaches are found), and the ongoing waste of recyclable elements will be simply BAU multiplied by population growth increases.
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