Mainstream properties generally have, on average, seen growth of 58% across 12 cities surveyed since December 2008. Most of this growth has been associated with economic recovery in the second half of that period, with 33% occurring between December 2011 and June 2015.
Growth in prime markets has actually been lower across the 12 cities, growing by an average of 37% over the past seven years. The highest growth took place before 2011, when buyers were more likely to invest capital rather than financing from income.
Heavily discounted
Mainstream property values are, on average, 19% of prime property values in the 12 cities. They are most heavily discounted in internationally invested cities such as Hong Kong, Dubai, Paris and London. US cities have the smallest gap between prime and mainstream values, alongside locally invested cities such as Sydney and Tokyo.