=? Thursday 21 July 2016 AFR commercialrealestate.com.au...

3
DEVELOPMENT SITES > > > ��AFR commercialrealestate.com.au 38 Property = ? House prices bounced back, says Domain Median dwelling price changes by city, housing type and period Changing picture Michael Bleby in in . for the resource-dependent capitals. on top of May’s reduction to 1.75 per cent, the ability of lower rates to push prices higher was weakening, Dr Wil- ‘‘We’re looking at an overall 3 per cent to 4 per cent national growth this ‘‘The longer-term dynamic of the cycle is 3 per cent to 4 per cent going Oceania snaps up Chinatown site in Bay Residences in Double Bay and It also owns a number of commercial buildings in Sydney including the LG Building in North Sydney, the P&O Building on Sussex Street and 92 Pitt acquired a Renwick The Sussex Street site was offered for sale by Jordan Lee and Steam Leung of a prime development site for a hotel, apart- ments or student housing with a height The three, five-level terraces were offloaded by Ambly Holdings, whose shareholders include members of the Cheng family from China and Hong Kong. The site is a 50-metre walk from Darling Harbour and walking distance from Lendlease’s $3 billion ‘‘Darling Square’’. The Australian Financial Review is one of the industry’s most valuable and essential daily business intelligence partners. The Monday to Saturday Property section in The Australian Financial Review explores who bought, who sold and who made money from the market across Australia, with coverage provided by dedicated journalists in all major capital cities. The section carries a range of news, features, analysis and profiles focusing on the listed property trusts, developers, fund managers and private investors. Colour. Clarity. Detail. C Available in prescription. Trump’s bond rout a threat to shares Global sharemarket rebounds follow- ing Donald Trump’s surprise US presi- dential victory may be short-lived. While sharemarkets initially jumped, bond markets have sold off heavily amid expectations that a Trump presidency would pump up infrastructure spending and stoke inflation. Now investors worry higher bond yields might hit shares, too. The S&P/ASX200 index slipped 0.4 per cent on Tuesday, led down by bond proxy stocks. Wilson Asset Management fund manager Geoff Wilson predicted the Australian sharemarket may fall about 5 per cent by late 2017 because of headwinds from rising bond yields. Justin Braitlin, chief investment officer of hedge fund Watermark Funds Management said Mr Trump’s victory was a political watershed. ‘‘We’re now in a bear market for bonds, and we think sharemarkets will follow," he said. "The rally in shares will probably last through Christmas, with the typical Christmas rally, but we think it will prove to be a sucker’s rally." Lowe leans againstfurther rate cuts RBA, IMF warn of debt, housing risk Jacob Greber Economics editor Continued p6 Heavily indebted Australian house- holds and governments need to build greater financial resilience against a global economy facing fresh uncertain- ties following the rise of Donald Trump, the Reserve Bank of Australia and International Monetary Fund have urged. In a major speech in Melbourne on Tuesday night, Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe hinted that he was unlikely to grant households further official interest rate relief lest it generate even more borrowing – even if the economy could use more consumer spending. ‘‘It is unlikely to be in the public interest, given current projections for the economy, to encourage a noticeable rise in household indebtedness, even if doing so might encourage slightly faster consumption growth in the short term,’’ Dr Lowe said. Days of mounting turmoil on global bond markets have sent yields sky- rocketing, stoking a financial market rout that threatens to ultimately test the ability of Australian borrowers to weather a surge in the global cost of money. While Australians could ‘‘take some comfort’’ that the country still has the ability to fend off future shocks including a flexible currency and remaining federal budget firepower, and a high household savings rate – he warned that ‘‘strengthening these buf- fers makes sense in the uncertain world in which we live.’’ The warning came just hours after the IMF suggested that a sudden out- break of Trump-style protectionism that may slam global trade is among the biggest risks facing Australia’s heavily-indebted economy in a crisis. The fund’s economists, who have been in the country over recent weeks, challenged Canberra to do more to lift productive infrastructure investment, saying the Reserve Bank no longer has much interest rate ammunition to stave off any sudden downturn. Bond market investors have been savaged over the past week on specula- tion a Trump presidency will deliver a boom in debt-financed infrastructure investment and tax cuts, ultimately breaking the global low disinflation affliction that has ground advanced economies down since the 2008 global financial crisis. Yields have spiked to their highest levels since January around the globe, with Australia’s 10-year treasury benchmark trading above 2.7 per cent for the first time in almost a year, though the sell-off slowed on Tuesday. Bets are also moving against further Reserve Bank interest rate cuts, with the probability of another reduction in the cash rate over the next 10 months narrowing on Tuesday to no more than 12 per cent compared to as much as 28 per cent on Monday. In the US, the jump in bond yields has sparked a www.afr.com| Wednesday 16 November 2016 $4FINANCIAL REVIEW High rent Holiday homes that pay off MagazineInside today A step closer| Aurecon senior director Louise Adams says gender equality programs are having an impact as new data show 42.6 per cent of management appointments in the last year were for women. Report p3, Accounting p35 Quadrant’s $300m tourism experience Exclusive| Private equity firm Quad- rant has spent $300 million in just a few months amassing a portfolio of ‘‘experiential’’ tourism businesses which it says will replace the mining boom. After buying Great Southern, owner of the Ghan and Indian Pacific railways , it has formed a new company called Experience Australia Group which will also run stakes in Cruise Whitsundays, the biggest tourism and ferry company in North Queensland and Rottnest Express, a big tour oper- ator in WA. Companies p15 AMP chair turns up pressure on CEO Exclusive| AMP chairman Catherine Brenner has turned up the pressure on CEO Craig Meller after prickly meet- ings with major shareholders. Brenner admitted to Chanticleer that one share- holder had called on the board to replace Meller as CEO but she said he had the full backing of the board. “The board backs Craig,” she said. Back page MarketsMiners push shares lowerp26 BHP tipped to boost dividendsp13 MASTER OF DARK ARTS Trump’s New America| Alt-right strategist enters the White House Features p36, OpinionGideon Rachman, Robert Samuelson, Gary Bowditch, Brian Tooheyp23, 38, 39 Jennifer HewettChina not Trumpp2 IMF warns on protectionismp6 Crackdown on investors: IMFp6 PM wanted 457 remake, toop5 Trump effect hits lenders Firstmac, the nation’s biggest non-bank lender, and nine other smaller lenders are discreetly raising fixed-rate mortgages by up to 45 basis points in a move expected to be followed by others as the "Trump effect" begins to bite local borrowers, according to lenders and market analysts. Firstmac has increased one to three-year rates on its owner-occupier and investor rates by up to 13 basis points. Owner- occupied rates have increased to 4.09 per cent and investor rates to 4.34 per cent. Martin North, of consultancy Digital Finance Analytics, said ‘‘other lenders are likely to follow’’.Report p29 Political turning point Some say the bond sell-off reflects fears other ‘barbarians’ could soon hold the levers of power. Karen Maley p26 As bond yields rise, dividend stocks look expensive. The whole process just unwinds. Philip Baker p28 Higher bond yields at a time of record global government debt? Enjoy the ride while it lasts. Jonathan Pain p25 Print Advertising: Australian Financial Review Advertising benefits¹ 3.5x 59% 96% more likely to be C-suite managers / CEO or General Managers more likely to be business decision makers more likely to buy an investment property in next 12 months Weekly sectors focus Monday Monday to Friday Thursday Rural Commercial Entrepreneur Property and entrepreneur section deadline Day Booking and cancellation Material Monday to Friday Property Section 10am, 2 business days prior Noon, 1 business day prior Entrepreneur Section 10am, 2 business days prior Noon, 1 business days prior Press inserts for commercial property and entrepreneur Make your product stand out from the competition by placing an insert on the same day as one of our weekly sections to coincide with the property industry. 1. emma TM conducted by Ipsos Media CT, People 14+ for the 12 months ending February 2017. All times are AEST.

Transcript of =? Thursday 21 July 2016 AFR commercialrealestate.com.au...

Page 1: =? Thursday 21 July 2016 AFR commercialrealestate.com.au ...ffx.adcentre.com.au.s3.amazonaws.com/trade...commercialrealestate.com.au 38 Property =? Houseprices bouncedback, saysDomain

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AFRThursday 21 July 2016TheAustralian Financial Review |www.afr.com

commercialrealestate.com.au

38 Property =?

Housepricesbouncedback,saysDomain

Median dwelling price changes by city, housing type and period

HOUSES

UNITS

SydneyMelbourneBrisbaneAdelaidePerthCanberraHobartDarwinNational

SydneyMelbourneBrisbaneAdelaidePerthCanberraHobartDarwinNational

Jun2016

$1,021,968$740,995$521,915$498,927$568,132$654,306$345,880$613,590$731,188

$669,830$450,933$370,251$294,165$367,025$399,505$276,312$448,417$524,905

Mar2016

$997,925$730,044$515,704$494,481$577,934$634,559$344,894$618,109$720,668

$665,913$435,684$377,127$299,137$376,120$405,934$269,473$448,416$521,205

Jun2015

$1,010,309$690,045$500,523$477,975$601,937$624,117$337,021$664,899$712,118

$666,902$439,113$382,405$293,848$398,223$417,806$250,220$455,423$524,159

Change(% QoQ)

+2.4+1.5+1.2+0.9-1.7

+3.1+0.3-0.7

+1.5

+0.6+3.5-1.8-1.7-2.4-1.6

+2.50.0

+0.7

Changing picture

SOURCE: DOMAIN GROUP

+1.2

+0.4

+0.1

+0.1

+2.6

+2.7

+2.7-3.2

-1.5

+7.4

+10.4

+4.3+4.4

+4.8-5.6

-4.4

-7.7

-7.8

Change(% YoY)

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

MichaelBleby

Lower interest rates and a resurgenceof investors pushed housing priceshigher in the June quarter, withSydney’s median house price jumpingback over the $1millionmark.The pick-up in Sydney’s median

house price came in a quarter inwhichMelbourne, Adelaide and Canberra allposted record highs, the latest DomainHouse PriceReport showed.Domain is owned by Fairfax Media,

publisher of The Australian FinancialReview.Nationally, house prices rose 1.5 per

cent from the March quarter, led byCanberra’s 3.1 per cent quarterly gainand Sydney’s 2.4 per cent increase.Apart from Brisbane, where

detached houses posted a 1.2 per centquarterly rise, there was little change

for the resource-dependent capitals.Prices fell 1.7 per cent in Perth and0.7 per cent inDarwin.While the report paints a stronger-

than-expectedpictureofdwellingpricegrowth this year – echoing theNationalAustralia Bank’s June quarterly surveylast week – conditions are still far fromtheir heady days of the past two yearswhich are unlikely to repeat, withdwelling price growth having out-stripped wages growth and the abilityofmanybuyers to accept higher prices.‘‘It’s not an inferno any more, just a

cosy little blaze,’’ Domain chief eco-nomistAndrewWilson said.‘‘Even though interest rates have

fallen, they don’t have the same fizz inthem. The pent-up demand has beensatisfiedtoa largedegree inSydneyandto a lesser extent inMelbourne.’’While Sydney’s median house price

picked up to $1,021,968 from $997,925inMarch, it remainsbelowtheSeptem-ber 2015 recordof $1,032,899.Further, while house prices were

generallyhigher, thepicturewasnot sorosy with apartments, with signs ofgreater supply starting to affect prices.Units in Melbourne posted strong

quarterly growth, but the national fig-ure was pulled down to a pedestrian

0.7 per cent by declines in Brisbane,Adelaide, Perth andCanberra.InSydney, apartmentprices rose just

0.6 per cent.‘‘Unit prices hardly moved,’’ Dr Wil-

son said. ‘‘There are signs supply iscatchingup.’’Darwin, at least, saw no change in

apartment values.Even with a further possible rate cut

on top of May’s reduction to 1.75 percent, the ability of lower rates to pushprices higher was weakening, Dr Wil-son said.‘‘We’re looking at an overall 3 per

cent to 4 per cent national growth thisyear,’’ he said.‘‘The longer-term dynamic of the

cycle is 3 per cent to 4 per cent goingforward.’’

Oceania snapsupChinatownsite● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

LarrySchlesinger

Three adjacent terraces on SussexStreet in Sydney’s Chinatown havebeen snappedup inone line by theLimfamily’s Oceania Property develop-ment and investment business for$21.35 million.The terraces at 321-325 Sussex Street

cover a land holding of 391 squaremetres and are expected to make wayfor a newhotel. An artist impression ofa scheme for the site shows the poten-tial for a tower of about 13 storeys.Oceania is controlled by property

developer JulinaLimwithher sonNicoTjen a co-director. Last year Ms Limsold her Wolseley Road mansion inPoint Piper for $28million.OceaniaProperty ismarketingapart-

ments in theGrosvenor,adevelopmentin Croydon in Sydney’s inner west. Ithas completed more than a dozendevelopments in Sydney, including the

Bay Residences in Double Bay andother high-endniche offerings.Italsoownsanumberofcommercial

buildings in Sydney including the LGBuilding in North Sydney, the P&OBuilding on Sussex Street and 92 PittStreet in theCBD.Last year, the group acquired a

679-square metre site on RenwickStreet, Redfern, for $5.6million.TheSussexStreet sitewasoffered for

sale by JordanLee and SteamLeung ofColliers International as a primedevelopment site for a hotel, apart-ments or studenthousingwithaheightlimit of 50metres.The three, five-level terraces were

offloaded by Ambly Holdings, whoseshareholders include members of theCheng family from China and HongKong. The site is a 50-metre walk fromTown Hall Station and DarlingHarbour and walking distance fromLendlease’s$3billion ‘‘DarlingSquare’’.The Australian Financial Review is one of the industry’s most valuable and essential

daily business intelligence partners.

The Monday to Saturday Property section in The Australian Financial Review explores who bought, who sold and who made money from the market across Australia, with coverage provided by dedicated journalists in all major capital cities.

The section carries a range of news, features, analysis and profiles focusing on the listed property trusts, developers, fund managers and private investors.

AFRGA1 A001

Colour. Clarity. Detail.CAvailable in prescription. STYLE SHOWN: KAWIKA

Trump’sbondrouta threat to sharesGlobal sharemarket rebounds follow-ing Donald Trump’s surprise US presi-dential victorymaybe short-lived.While sharemarkets initially

jumped, bond markets have sold offheavily amid expectations that aTrump presidency would pump upinfrastructure spending and stokeinflation. Now investors worry higherbond yieldsmight hit shares, too.The S&P/ASX200 index slipped 0.4

per cent onTuesday, led downbybondproxy stocks.Wilson Asset Management fund

manager Geoff Wilson predicted theAustralian sharemarketmay fall about5 per cent by late 2017 because ofheadwinds fromrisingbond yields.Justin Braitlin, chief investment

officer of hedge fund WatermarkFunds Management said Mr Trump’svictorywas apoliticalwatershed.‘‘We’re now in a bear market for

bonds, andwe think sharemarketswillfollow,"hesaid. "Therally inshareswillprobably last through Christmas, withthe typical Christmas rally, but wethink itwillprove tobeasucker’s rally."

�Lowe leans against further rate cuts

RBA, IMFwarnofdebt,housingrisk

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

JacobGreberEconomics editor

Continued p6

Heavily indebted Australian house-holds and governments need to buildgreater financial resilience against aglobal economy facing freshuncertain-ties following the rise of DonaldTrump, the Reserve Bank of Australiaand InternationalMonetary Fund haveurged.In a major speech in Melbourne on

Tuesday night, Reserve Bank governorPhilipLowehinted thathewasunlikelyto grant households further officialinterest rate relief lest it generate evenmore borrowing – even if the economycould usemore consumer spending.‘‘It is unlikely to be in the public

interest, given current projections fortheeconomy, toencourageanoticeablerise in household indebtedness, even ifdoing so might encourage slightlyfaster consumptiongrowth in the shortterm,’’ DrLowe said.Days of mounting turmoil on global

bond markets have sent yields sky-rocketing, stoking a financial marketrout that threatens toultimately test theability of Australian borrowers toweather a surge in the global cost ofmoney.While Australians could ‘‘take some

comfort’’ that the country still has theability to fend off future shocks –including a flexible currency andremaining federal budget firepower,and a high household savings rate – hewarned that ‘‘strengthening these buf-fersmakessense intheuncertainworldinwhichwe live.’’The warning came just hours after

the IMF suggested that a sudden out-break of Trump-style protectionismthat may slam global trade is amongthe biggest risks facing Australia’sheavily-indebted economy in a crisis.The fund’s economists, who have

been in the country over recent weeks,challenged Canberra to do more to liftproductive infrastructure investment,saying the Reserve Bank no longer has

much interest rate ammunition tostave off any suddendownturn.Bond market investors have been

savagedover thepastweekon specula-tion a Trump presidency will deliver aboom in debt-financed infrastructureinvestment and tax cuts, ultimatelybreaking the global low disinflationaffliction that has ground advancedeconomies down since the 2008 globalfinancial crisis.Yields have spiked to their highest

levels since January around the globe,with Australia’s 10-year treasurybenchmark trading above 2.7 per centfor the first time in almost a year,though the sell-off slowedonTuesday.Bets are also moving against further

Reserve Bank interest rate cuts, withthe probability of another reduction inthe cash rate over the next 10 monthsnarrowingonTuesday tonomore than12 per cent compared to asmuch as 28per cent on Monday. In the US, thejump in bond yields has sparked a

www.afr.com | Wednesday 16 November 2016 $4 INCLUDES GST

FINANCIAL REVIEW

High rentHolidayhomesthat pay offMagazine Inside today

Astepcloser | Aurecon senior director LouiseAdams says gender equalityprograms are having an impact as newdata show42.6 per cent ofmanagementappointments in the last yearwere forwomen. Report p3, Accounting p35 PHOTO: PAT SCALA

Quadrant’s $300mtourismexperienceExclusive | Private equity firm Quad-rant has spent $300 million in just afew months amassing a portfolio of‘‘experiential’’ tourism businesseswhich it says will replace the miningboom. After buying Great Southern,owner of the Ghan and Indian Pacificrailways , ithas formedanewcompanycalled Experience Australia Groupwhich will also run stakes in CruiseWhitsundays, the biggest tourism andferry company in North Queenslandand Rottnest Express, a big tour oper-ator inWA.� Companies p15

AMPchair turnsuppressureonCEOExclusive | AMP chairman CatherineBrenner has turned up the pressure onCEO Craig Meller after prickly meet-ings withmajor shareholders. Brenneradmitted to Chanticleer that one share-holder had called on theboard to replace Melleras CEO but she said hehad the full backing ofthe board. “The boardbacks Craig,” she said.� Back page

� Markets Miners push shares lower p26� BHP tipped to boost dividends p13

MASTEROFDARKARTSTrump’sNewAmerica |Alt-right strategist enters theWhiteHouseFeatures p36, Opinion Gideon Rachman, Robert Samuelson, Gary Bowditch, Brian Toohey p23, 38, 39

� Jennifer Hewett China not Trump p2� IMF warns on protectionism p6� Crackdown on investors: IMF p6� PM wanted 457 remake, too p5

Trumpeffect hits lendersFirstmac, the nation’sbiggest non-bank lender,and nine other smallerlenders are discreetlyraising fixed-ratemortgages by up to 45basis points in a move

expected to be followed by others as the"Trump effect" begins to bite localborrowers, according to lenders andmarket analysts.

Firstmac has increased one to three-yearrates on its owner-occupier and investorrates by up to 13 basis points. Owner-occupied rates have increased to 4.09 percent and investor rates to 4.34 per cent.Martin North, of consultancy DigitalFinance Analytics, said ‘‘other lenders arelikely to follow’’. Report p29

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

Political turningpoint

Some say the bondsell-off reflects fearsother ‘barbarians’could soonhold thelevers of power.

Karen Maley p26● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

Asbond yields rise,dividend stockslook expensive. Thewhole process justunwinds.

Philip Baker p28● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

Higher bond yieldsat a timeof recordglobal governmentdebt? Enjoy the ridewhile it lasts.

Jonathan Pain p25● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

Print Advertising: Australian Financial Review

Advertising benefits¹ 3.5x 59% 96%

more likely to be C-suite managers /CEO or General Managers

more likely to be business decision makers

more likely to buy an investment property in next 12 months

Weekly sectors focusMonday Monday to Friday Thursday

Rural Commercial Entrepreneur

Property and entrepreneur section deadline

Day Booking and cancellation Material

Monday to Friday Property Section 10am, 2 business days prior Noon, 1 business day prior

Entrepreneur Section 10am, 2 business days prior Noon, 1 business days prior

Press inserts for commercial property and entrepreneurMake your product stand out from the competition by placing an insert on the same day as one of our weekly sections to coincide with the property industry.

1. emmaTM conducted by Ipsos Media CT, People 14+ for the 12 months ending February 2017. All times are AEST.

Page 2: =? Thursday 21 July 2016 AFR commercialrealestate.com.au ...ffx.adcentre.com.au.s3.amazonaws.com/trade...commercialrealestate.com.au 38 Property =? Houseprices bouncedback, saysDomain

Size: 100(h)x147(w)mm

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WednesdayThursday –

FridayThursday Saturday Colour

Casual $68.70 ex GST $50.13 ex GST +15% +30% +40% +20% +30%

Page 3: =? Thursday 21 July 2016 AFR commercialrealestate.com.au ...ffx.adcentre.com.au.s3.amazonaws.com/trade...commercialrealestate.com.au 38 Property =? Houseprices bouncedback, saysDomain

Property section Entrepreneur section

Size GST Monday – Wednesday Thursday – Friday Thursday Saturday

38 x 7 – Full pageex GST $27,319.93 $30,883.40 $33,259.04 $20,801.94

inc GST $30,051.92 $33,971.74 $36,584.95 $22,882.14

28 x 5ex GST $14,378.91 $16,254.42 $17,504.76 $10,948.39

inc GST $15,816.80 $17,879.86 $19,255.24 $12,043.23

20 x 7 – Half pageex GST $14,378.91 $16,254.42 $17,504.76 $9,384.34

inc GST $15,816.80 $17,879.86 $19,255.24 $10,322.37

20 x 4ex GST $8,216.52 $9,288.24 $10,002.72 $6,256.22

inc GST $9,038.17 $10,217.06 $11,002.99 $6,881.85

20 x 3ex GST $6,162.39 $6,966.18 $7,502.04 $4,692.17

inc GST $6,778.63 $7,662.80 $8,252.24 $5,161.38

10 x 7ex GST $7,189.46 $8,127.21 $8,752.38 $5,474.20

inc GST $7,908.41 $8,939.93 $9,627.62 $6,021.62

12x 4ex GST $4,929.91 $5,572.94 $6,001.63 $3,753.73

inc GST $5,422.90 $6,130.23 $6,601.80 $4,129.11

10 x 4ex GST $4,108.26 $4,644.12 $5,001.63 $3,128.11

inc GST $4,519.09 $5,108.53 $5,501.50 $3,440.92

12 x 3ex GST $3,697.43 $4,179.71 $4,501.22 $2,815.30

inc GST $4,067.17 $4,597.68 $4,951.35 $3,096.83

10 x 3ex GST $3,081.20 $3,483.09 $3,751.02 $2,346.08

inc GST $3,389.32 $3,831.40 $4,126.12 $2,580.69

12 x 2ex GST $2,464.96 $2,786.47 $3,000.82 $1,876.87

inc GST $2,711.46 $3,065.12 $3,300.90 $2,064.55

10 x 2ex GST $2,054.13 $2,322.06 $2,500.68 $1,564.06

inc GST $2,259.54 $2,554.27 $2,750.75 $1,720.46

Property and entrepreneur section – display advertising rates

These rates are applicable to the Australian Financial Review Property and Entrepreneur Section (Monday – Friday) as of June 2017 and are subject to change. Rates are inclusive of colour loading.