More recent buyers are reselling their homes, and that may be an early sign of mortgage trouble

An increasing number of Australians are selling homes they have owned for fewer than two years, many are at a loss, and analysts warn it may be an early sign of mortgage distress.

The data comes from CoreLogic, as part of its regular Pain and Gain report, which looks at whether existing owners have profited or lost from the resale of their homes.

While the overall number of resales over the first three months of this year declined by 6.5 per cent compared to the end of last year, CoreLogic’s Eliza Owen noticed a very strange pattern in the data.

“There is an unusual increase in the proportion of people selling after a short hold period,” she told ABC News.

“Importantly, an unusual number choosing to incur a loss over that period as well.

“This is pretty counter to what we see with this kind of resale analysis, usually, where hold periods actually tend to expand as the market goes into decline.”

CoreLogic’s figures show the proportion of resales that were held by the seller for fewer than two years was 8.4 per cent during the March quarter of this year, up from 5.8 per cent in the December quarter of 2021.

Moreover, the proportion of loss-making sales that has been held for less than two years more than trebled from just 3 per cent in the December quarter of 2021 to 12.4 per cent in the most recent numbers from the March quarter.

Ms Owen said the data added some evidence to stories she had heard via friends, contacts and social media of some owners deciding to sell before they might be forced to.

“Anecdotally I’ve certainly heard of people selling investment properties or choosing to sell their home because they just can’t afford the mortgage or they know they can’t afford the mortgage in 12 months’ time or when they roll off their fixed rate,” she said.

“So I think that story holds some weight.”

‘Calmly selling’ despite losses

Ms Owen said her data also understated the true proportion of recent buyers now selling at a loss because it did not include costs such as taxes, mortgage fees, agent charges, marketing and moving expenses.

“This is not taking into account any of the transaction costs associated with purchasing a property such as stamp duty,” he explained.

“So your net profit [for those who made gains] are going to be relatively small as well.”