The New Zealand Herald

Bank seeks more power to curb home borrowing

RBNZ says 10,000 buyers would be barred if higher debt-income ratio was applied

- Liam Dann — Additional reporting Business Desk

More than 10,000 house hunters could have their hopes of getting a mortgage dashed if the Reserve Bank were to deploy the debt to income restrictio­ns it is currently seeking to add to its regulatory powers.

In a consultati­on document released yesterday the RBNZ suggests that limiting lending at a debt ratio of five times income could be appropriat­e if house prices rise sharply.

Reserve Bank Governor Graeme Wheeler has stressed that the regulation­s would not be deployed in the current market conditions but would like to see them added to the tool box to deal with any further accelerati­on.

House price growth in Auckland and some other regions has cooled in the past six months.

The RBNZ ascribes some of the slowdown to its loan-to-value ratio restrictio­ns which have limited bank lending based on the value of a property.

However, housing debt remains one of the three key risks to the financial system as highlighte­d in last week’s Reserve Bank Financial Stability Report.

The bank estimates that of 78,200 mortgages issued for housing each year 10,400 would be blocked if restrictio­ns set a debt limit at five times income.

Of that number, just 1600 would be first-home buyers, 700 other owner-occupiers, and 8800 investors.

The bank’s research found that investors typically had higher debt to income ratios than other buyers.

Banks could not make more than 20 per cent of their loans to high debtto-income borrowers.

The RBNZ data showed about 27 per cent of lending is at a debt-to- income ratio of six times or more, and a further 13 per cent is at a ratio of between five and six times, meaning the restrictio­n could “significan­tly reduce” the amount of lending at a high ratio.

Its models suggested the restrictio­ns would significan­tly reduce the risk of a housing crisis and lower the threat of a financial crisis.

The bank acknowledg­ed the downsides of introducin­g the restrictio­ns including the effect on firsthome buyers which would be significan­t for those affected.

For that reason it would “explore the possibilit­y of exemption for owner-occupiers who wished to purchase and occupy a single relatively low-priced home”.

“While the policy would stop some potential buyers from purchasing homes, the policy offers a variety of options for affected borrowers (such as searching for a speed limit loan, bringing down planned debt to income, buying a cheaper home, or using the constructi­on exemption).”

Submission­s are due by August 18, and, if the Reserve Bank does add DTIs to its policy tool kit, it said it would consult with the public again before introducin­g the measure.

Property Institute of New Zealand chief executive Ashley Church repeated an earlier warning that the introducti­on of debt-to-income limits on mortgage lending would have the potential to do significan­t damage to the Auckland housing market, and the wider New Zealand economy.

Finance Minister Steven Joyce said the use of debt-to-income ratios would be a “significan­t interventi­on” and there was “time to consider their possible future use carefully”.

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