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BNZ chief economist says the cost of shoring up the stability of the financial sector is being borne by would-be first home buyers

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BNZ chief economist says the cost of shoring up the stability of the financial sector is being borne by would-be first home buyers
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The cost of improving the strength of the financial sector is being paid for by the first home buyers, BNZ chief economist Tony Alexander says.

In his latest "weekly overview" Alexander crunched the numbers on mortgage approvals, comparing the three-week period to mid-November with the last three weeks of October from this year going all the way back to 2004.

The results very much back up the anecdotal evidence that the Reserve Bank's "speed limits" on high loan-to-value lending applied from October 1 this year have had a big impact.

"The weekly home loan approvals data from the Reserve Bank showed that in the week ending November 15 the number of home loans approved was down by almost 12% from a year earlier," Alexander said. 

"Approvals have been running at levels below a year ago since about the week ending October 11. The LVR rule has clearly had an impact on lending activity. The question becomes then, how long will this last?"

Alexander's calculations, taken from RBNZ weekly mortgage figures  (as shown in table form below) revealed that on average between 2004 and 2012 in the first three weeks of November the number of home loan approvals has run 9.5% above loans in the last three weeks of October. 

"This year the change has been a fall of 2.9% and in no other year has a fall occurred. Therefore one can safely say that lending has been much weaker than one would have expected, especially as in other years when overall lending growth to September was similar (latest month available), increases still occurred.

"In fact, one can argue that for the recent three week period the number of loans has been about 10%+ less than would have been the case without the LVR rule." 

This meant therefore, that the LVR rules were "working" in terms of reducing bank exposure to loss of equity on home loans should a large shock occur, Alexander said. 

"The issue, however, is that the cost of improving financial strength is being paid by first home buyers  - and the beneficiaries are all other buyers including investors and foreigners." 

The Reserve Bank’s actions, while based upon the best of intentions, have "skewed" New Zealand’s housing market toward a reduced rate of home ownership and increased ownership by investors, Alexander said.

The latest BNZ-REINZ Residential Market Survey out last week showed that first home buyers were deserting the market in droves.

Alexander believes more young people will look to lower their sights with their first properties and instead of becoming owner-occupiers will become investors.

                          Change in 3 weeks to mid-Nov         Annual household

                           from last 3 weeks of October            debt growth, September

2013                            -2.9%                                                   5.5%

2012                            2.5%                                                    2.4%

2011                            10.5%                                                  1.0%

2010                            11.0%                                                  2.2%

2009                            0.4%                                                   2.4%

2008                            13.4%                                                  6.5%

2007                            13.2%                                                  12.9%

2006                            5.4%                                                    12.9%

2005                            9.7%                                                    15.5%

2004                            19.5%                                                  15.7%

First set of figures shows change in number of mortgage approvals between October and November, second set is the RBNZ's figures showing overall credit growth, with September being latest available month.
 
 

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5 Comments

What is the problem -- unsustainable financial sector in NZ or unoffordablly high property price in AKL? Do first home buyers create both problem more or less?

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Greetings from the 19th at the Kaanapali Beach Golf Club ol' chaps and chapesses ...beautiful sunny Sunday afternoon here, cooled off by the Hawaiian trades  ... bliss ol' boy 

 

Back to more fiscal matters of that far way, little place in a far, far corner of the Pay-sif-ique ......Aotearoa or New Zealand,  as it is commonly called here in the Sandwich Isles....

 

I see my ol' boy mates in the NZ Reserve Bank and the National Party (GOP for short ...haw haw) are going great guns of transfering as much wealth as possible from the lower "working" classes to the likes of my ilk or the 0.1%  ..... haw haw and another haw haw ....  (for effect)

 

Why should the lower classes be entitled to a home of their own ! .... that means less moolah in the rental property pool ... purchase a home to live in ...Humbug !!   more delightful investments for my great little friends (collecting all those bank mortgage interest payments $$$$$ for mwah !!)  - the local residential property investoor ! and colleagues a bit closer to home  - the overseas investoor ...maaaarvellous from the Kiwi lads -  whack up the deposit required and push out the competition ...true genius :)

 

Back to my mai-tai plebs  - enjoy your over priced, leaky, damp, cold Grey Lynn villa but just keep the money flowing in with your interest payments........haw haw   

 

Waiter ! another round for my fine (very rich) friends ................

 

ps Christov ol' boy ...are you still gracing thy native timbers floors,  in your penny loafers at the Northern Club ? .... hope all is "tickety boo" ...haw haw

 

 

 

 

 

  

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Is there currently or has there ever been a company listed on the NZX or NZAX that derived the majority of it's earnings from rental property?

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Not residential property.  Some big ones in the US.  The biggest, Equity Residential has a market cap on NYSE of USD18billion.  New ones are popping up, feasting on the remains of the sub-prime foreclosures.  

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This is getting a bit boring, so here we go again, from Friday 10@10. 

 

by Stephen Hulme | 24 Nov 13, 5:05pm 2   Vote up!

That's why I keep banging on about this:
 

But I guess BNZ still funds mortgage assets with foreign wholesale loans, exempt from OBR pre-positioning, to extend the asset to liabiltiy ratio beyond the prudent 100% of local deposits - an update confirming this ratio is below the previously noted 140%level would offer some comfort to depositors. Read more and follow links
 
More explicit rating agency detail can be viewed here:
 
In January Moody's highlighted that, at more than 140%, the New Zealand banking sector has the highest loan-to-deposit ratio out of 13 Asia-Pacific countries. Of the big four banks, S&P figures as of December 31, put ANZ's at 135.9%, ASB's at 136.6%, BNZ's at 162%, and Westpac's at 147.4%. Kiwibank's was 109.9%

by Andrewj | 24 Nov 13, 5:32pm 2   Vote up!

How To Tell If Your Small Bank Is In Trouble
 
Next, look at the bank’s loan-to-deposit ratio. Even if your lender didn’t lard up on mortgage-backed securities, it might still be “loaned up”–meaning that it has maxed out its percentage of loans to deposits on hand. The larger that percentage, the greater the risk the bank has taken on. If customers begin to pull deposits, the bank might be suddenly strapped for cash.
Healthy loan-to-deposit ratios typically fall between 95% to 105%, says Dick Bove, bank analyst at Punk Ziegel & Co., a boutique investment bank and advisory. Venture much higher than that and the bank could be courting trouble. To find this ratio, divide “loans and leases, net of unearned income and allowance” (item 4.d. in Schedule RC-Balance Sheet) by “deposits” (item 13 in the same Schedule).
 
http://www.forbes.com/2008/10/10/fdic-call-report-ent-fin-cx_mf_1010bankfail.html
 
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-20/schulte-house-bubble/4969228
 
http://gregpytel.blogspot.com/2009/09/loan-to-deposit-ratio-and-banks_02...
 
http://gregpytel.blogspot.com/2009/09/loan-to-deposit-ratio-and-banks_02.html

 

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