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PM Key on LVR controls: 'For financial stability, not monetary policy means; Too easy to get around restrictions'

Property
PM Key on LVR controls: 'For financial stability, not monetary policy means; Too easy to get around restrictions'

By Alex Tarrant

Prime Minister John Key is in the camp arguing that forcing banks to tighten loan-to-value ratios on property lending will do little on its own to stop rampant house price rises in Auckland.

The Reserve Bank is currently in discussions with the Treasury about using new 'macro-prudential' tools in its efforts to foster stability of the financial system. The ability of the Bank to impose controls on loan-to-value ratios (LVRs), capital ratios and bank reserve requirements is under discussion.

The Bank and government are adamant that the new tools are only to be used in the financial stability sphere of the Reserve Bank's mandate, rather than for monetary policy means.

That means the new tools would not be used to complement the Official Cash Rate if the Bank decided to tighten monetary policy in response to rising house prices or excessive credit growth.

But if it believed the stability of New Zealand's financial system was at risk, the Reserve Bank says these tools could be used to force banks to strengthen their balance sheets, by reducing high LVR lending and forcing the banks to hold back more capital for every loan they make.

Where the Bank may use the tools in response to housing market activity was if it believed rising prices posed a risk to the financial system.

Opposition parties argue the Reserve Bank should be using macro-prudential tools alongside the Official Cash Rate for monetary policy means. They point to use of loan-to-value ratio controls in Hong Kong and Singapore as examples of attempts to use the tools to control housing market activity.

Former Reserve Bank Governor Alan Bollard said in an exit interview with interest.co.nz in September that LVR controls would be the least desirable new tool for the Bank to use if it wanted to affect house prices.

"I can remember the 1970s and you can't Bernard, that's why," Bollard told Bernard Hickey.

"Those sorts of direct interventions (were used) and they ended up with lots of distortions, and they ended up with people finding other ways to get money, and that's where some of our current crop of finance companies came from, ways to get around bank regulation in the 1970s," he said.

Current Governor Graeme Wheeler told Parliament's Finance and Expenditure Committee in November that macro-prudential instruments were designed much more for obtaining financial sector stability.

"It’s when asset bubbles build up, it’s where credit grows at excessive rates that feeds through to asset prices and the like," Wheeler said.

“That’s when you want to be deploying those sorts of instruments.”

Wheeler told the Committee that when other countries had deployed LVR controls, first-home buyers were often exempt, so that they mainly captured people trading up or buying second-homes.

Key agrees

Speaking to media on Monday afternoon, Prime Minister John Key indicated he was of the same opinion.

"Any consumer can effectively go around that [LVR controls]," he said.

"All historical attempts to stop that haven’t been very successful.

“You can certainly protect the banks’ balance sheets from over-exposure to the property market, but the capacity of someone to go to their friend or lawyer or some other institution to get that other piece of equity that they don’t have, is always real."

Put to him that he didn’t seem much of a fan of LVR controls, Key said:

“I wouldn’t characterise it that way. What I would say is, I think the fact that the Bank is taking a much more hands-on, conservative, prudent view of being able to manage that is absolutely the right thing to do, just as they’ve been looking at...[banks'] capital ratios.

“All I’m simply saying is, that is one element of the equation, and it is always possible for people to go around that," he said.

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7 Comments

It is most likely that JK and Wheeler are completely wrong and that they know that they are wrong. The other sources of borrowing that homebuyers will turn to to make up the deposit are mostly not really the same as that supplied by our trading banks. Our banks borrow money into existance when we borrow it. Most of the other sources don't - or at least not directly. So if the intention is to slow down the rate of increase in bank created money then LVRs are probably a useful if imperfect tool. In other words it is not about our behaviours- the area that JK is focused on but rather it is about trading bank cartel behaviour which JK seems to ignore.

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Pretty simple for a bank to track deposits into an applicants account to sniff out any 'gettng around' the rules. Any large deposits etc out of context, would need to be explained.

 

At best this is a spurious argument. If I follow his logic, then because people can get around rules, why bother with them?

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a far more effective control that the RBNZ could employ would be insisting that banks set aside more capital when lending money for housing. we should be encouraging banks to lend money to the productive sector (ie businesses) and discouraging them from lending money on unproductive assets (housing).

as i understand it the banks have to set aside half as much capital for housing loans than they do for business loans, that seems completely counter-intuitive to me.

by doing what i suggest above, the banks would be forced to self-regulate by taking less risk on housing (ie lower LVR's), they might also be prepared to take more risk on businesses which could help boost the productive sector and drive employment.

 

 

 

 

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The RBNZ could simply increase interest rates, but that would crash the economy, which says alot about the the so called recovery. 

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I think the government & reserve bank WANT another housing boom, they certanly aren't doing anything to prevent it.

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Plain and simple isn't it...we have an economy utterly dependent on the property game remaining in play ....

This LVR story is so much fluff and bollocks....the banks make the rules and tell Key and Wheeler how the game is to be played.

Expect no change in current bubble policies until the banks detect a market rejection of the way they manage the economy and then the first efforts will always be to pump cheaper credit and BS the market. The very last thing they will allow are controls that strangle their fat profits.

Farming the NZ economy is the real game.

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@Wolly @Notch-  agreed!  

Somehow banks need to be encouraged to lend to business, and perhaps govt should share some of the burden. In exchange banks are mandated to reduce mortgage debt.

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