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Mortgages with LVRs above 80%, and even above 90%, increasing at three of the country's big five banks; Up NZ$800 mln overall in 3 mths

Property
Mortgages with LVRs above 80%, and even above 90%, increasing at three of the country's big five banks; Up NZ$800 mln overall in 3 mths

By Gareth Vaughan

The big banks are increasing the amount of residential mortgages they're writing with loan to value ratios (LVRs) in excess of 80%.

After tightening home loan lending ratios in late 2008 as the global financial crisis (GFC) worsened a slump in the property market, most of the banks dropped 100% lending offers and moved to an 80% LVR maximum. However, mortgages with LVRs above 80%, and even above 90%, are now on the rise at ASB, BNZ and Westpac.

Based on their latest general disclosure statements (GDSs), ASB's residential mortgages at LVRs above 90% rose in value by NZ$353 million in the September quarter from the June quarter, BNZ's rose NZ$81 million and Westpac's increased NZ$29 million. Mortgages with LVRs of between 80% and 90% rose NZ$133 million at ASB, NZ$152 million at Westpac and NZ$71 million at BNZ. Mortgages in the 80% to 90% LVR range also climbed at Kiwibank, by NZ$29.7 million.

However, home loans with 90% plus LVRs fell at the state owned bank by NZ$20.4 million. At the country's biggest bank, ANZ New Zealand, residential mortgages in both the 80% to 90% and 90% plus LVR ranges fell. The over 90s fell NZ$304 million and the value of those in the 80% to 90% range dropped NZ$28 million.

Overall, based on their GDSs, the big five banks were sitting on NZ$14.3 billion worth of mortgages with 90% plus LVRs at September 30, up NZ$300 million over the three months from June 30. They held NZ$20.3 billion worth in the 80% to 90% LVR range, up NZ$500 million. That's a total of NZ$34.6 billion worth of mortgages at LVRs above 80%, or 19.2% of the total NZ$180 billion worth of mortgages held by the big five banks according to the LVR tables in their GDSs.

At the lower end of the scale, Westpac and BNZ grew mortgages with LVRs of up to 60% in the September quarter by NZ$341 million and NZ$178 million, respectively. ASB, however, recorded a drop of NZ$163 million. All three recorded drops across the the 60% to 80% range. ANZ and Kiwibank disclose a block 0% to 80% range. Kiwibank's rose NZ$308.8 million and ANZ's rose by NZ$161 million.

The Reserve Bank has made banks disclose their residential mortgage lending by LVRs since the March 2008 quarter.

Weekly mortgage approvals top NZ$1 billion again with ASB & Westpac most aggressive

Meanwhile, weekly mortgage approvals have topped NZ$1 billion by value two weeks running, according to Reserve Bank figures. Prior to this, the last time weekly approvals topped NZ$1 billion was in April 2009.

Shaun Riley, CEO of Mike Pero Mortgages, told interest.co.nz Westpac and ASB were currently the most aggressive in terms of LVRs. But that said, Riley said all lenders were very competitive in terms of their overall offering including interest rates and legal contributions.

"Our business is mainly coming from first home buyers, although finding a good property is still a challenge," Riley said. "We are also getting a lot of people using KiwiSaver as a deposit. We have very little interest from investors at present. One good thing that our brokers are noticing is that many clients have a lot less short-term debt than in prior years, which makes getting an approval easier."

First home buyers tend to have lower deposits, he added, so this can drive higher LVRs.

"But also the lenders have only been active in the higher LVR space in the last 12-18 months, so this will be the main driver of the increase."

Riley said Mike Pero was still seeing strong interest in mortgages as Christmas approaches so he expects flow on in February and March.

"But whether this continues into the remainder of next year is not certain."

Mortgage approvals

Select chart tabs

Source: RBNZ
Source: RBNZ
Source: RBNZ

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6 Comments

Alan has the scope up to his dud eye....hohum here we go again....

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Good news for bears who think we are about to have another global decline, bad news for people who don't think there is a global depression on right now, whatever the majority is doing I like to do the opposite, if they're gearing up, I'm deleveraging.

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Wonder what the average or typical "new" mortgage is on an actual purchase? Over the last 18 months or so.

And then given that typical or average amount might be 300k - 350k or more (eliminating top-ups or renovations) then it would be interesting what the % of after tax income (household and/or personal income) is for these loans.    Or the $$ amount left each month after all fixed expenses - some banks work on $1200 available after all fixed costs...

Danger is: these buyers might already be 'stretching' themselves on 5.6%  with not much latitude for rate rises .... or for house values decreasing ....

 

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Great blog. The unbridled greed of the few in the banking industry has resulted in great damage to New zealand, Australia, and global economies and society. They say no good deed goes unpunished, and the reverse seems to have happened here. Their bad deeds have been rewarded with bailouts, blame shifting and bonuses. It makes me sick.

I wonder about the psychology of Aussie/Kiwi bulls and property investors in this environment. Do they really think this is a new paradigm where housing bubbles never burst. Reading the spruiking property bull comments below, you'd have to say YES!

Classic Signs of a Housing Bubble

These people live in a world of delusion, so what hope is there for society? How can you ever change the minds of people like that, people who are that sure the property bubble is a myth? I reckon Australia and NZ are both doomed!

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Leaverage is heading for the Moon and the LVR level too...Bolly allowing covered bonds and doing what he is told to do...expect the ocr slash to happen next...we have to work hard to catch the piigs folks...don't wanna miss the depression...now which political flunky wants a fat pay rise?

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The RBNZ figures for household debt continue to show growth well below the inflation rate. The lowest increase (1.1% y/y) since the series began twenty years ago. Agriculture at -0.9%  has had a minus sign in front of it these past six months and business sliding along at 1% yoy.  These are unprecedented figures from the RBNZ and confirm we are in a major private sector deleveraging phase. The government; not so much!

The banks are getting desperate, can't have the debt slaves breaking out of their chains now can we. Never mind; the government's building up a great big, fat, slab of debt to the private banks on our behalf.

http://www.rbnz.govt.nz/statistics/monfin/c5/download.html

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