Our Data

Economist Pack

Know the numbers that matter – timely data on market movements

Bundled residential property market indicators

Economist Pack delivers timely indicators of Australian housing market conditions including CoreLogic’s market leading hedonic home value index measures. Published just one day in arrears, our monthly updates keep you on the pulse of market movements.

Published on the first working day of each month, Economist Pack delivers data current to the end of the previous month.

Economist Pack metrics are relied on by a variety of stakeholders including policymakers, decision makers within banking and finance, and real estate professionals.

A suite of housing market indicators, including headline measures of movements in housing values, sales volumes & total returns (capital growth plus gross yields).

Data is provided for houses, units and combined dwellings across each of the GCCSA regions of Australia as well as state, national and combined capitals/regional geographies.

Trusted and relied on by industry leaders.

Australia’s leading measure of housing market conditions.

Over 60% of bank balance sheets are dedicated to residential mortgages, making the Economist Pack data a critical tool to assess housing market performance, support risk-based decisions, identify opportunities and developing formed benchmarks.

The Economist Pack is a trusted source of data among leading economic commentators when forecasting housing market movements and commenting on market conditions.

Staying on top of market trends is critical for real estate professionals. The Economist Pack makes it easy to remain up to date with independent, comprehensive and timely insights into market conditions that can be used to inform agency teams, customers and prospects.

Add value to your service. Keep customers informed on housing market conditions to attract and retain new clients, and deepen existing relationships to build referrals by sharing critical market intel that’s timely, respected and relevant.

Understanding housing trends and the costs associated with home ownership is a critical component of assessing the economy and informing macro and micro policy decisions such as town planning, lending rules, affordability initiatives and the interplay between housing supply and demand.

CoreLogic’s Economist Pack is regularly featured in key policy documents including the Reserve Bank of Australia’s Statement on Monetary Policy and Financial Stability Review.

Trusted and relied on by industry leaders.

Australia’s leading measure of housing market conditions.

Over 60% of bank balance sheets are dedicated to residential mortgages, making the Economist Pack data a critical tool to assess housing market performance, support risk-based decisions, identify opportunities and developing formed benchmarks.

The Economist Pack is a trusted source of data among leading economic commentators when forecasting housing market movements and commenting on market conditions.

Staying on top of market trends is critical for real estate professionals. The Economist Pack makes it easy to remain up to date with independent, comprehensive and timely insights into market conditions that can be used to inform agency teams, customers and prospects.

Add value to your service. Keep customers informed on housing market conditions to attract and retain new clients, and deepen existing relationships to build referrals by sharing critical market intel that’s timely, respected and relevant.

Understanding housing trends and the costs associated with home ownership is a critical component of assessing the economy and informing macro and micro policy decisions such as town planning, lending rules, affordability initiatives and the interplay between housing supply and demand.

CoreLogic’s Economist Pack is regularly featured in key policy documents including the Reserve Bank of Australia’s Statement on Monetary Policy and Financial Stability Review.

Want to learn more?

See how the Economoist Pack can help you navigate the Australian property market