The New Zealand Herald

WILL THE MORTGAGE SWALLOW YOU IN RETIREMENT?

The dream of retiring in a mortgage-free home is stretching out of reach for New Zealanders, old and young. CATHERINE SMITH investigat­es.

-

Feeling stressed that you’re never going to get out from under the mortgage? You’re not alone.

The recent Global Housing and Mortgage Outlook by internatio­nal ratings agency Fitch announced New Zealand has one of the highest levels of indebtedne­ss, with household debt sitting at 93 percent of GDP. Although, for once, things are worse in Australia, where household-debtto-GDP level soared last year to a frightenin­g 121 percent, the highest in the world.

And high household debt isn’t just stressful for individual­s. Borrowers are exposed to downturns, more vulnerable to financial shocks.

OneRoof and its data insights partner Valocity looked at where homeowners are toughing out mortgage payments around the country and where they are mortgage-free. And we found that, like the long-faded dream of buying a first home in your 20s, the dream of entering your retirement mortgage-free is quickly slipping away.

Across the country, only one third of properties are owned mortgage-free. Alarmingly that’s three percent down on the 36 percent free and clear five years ago.

James Wilson, director of valuation innovation at Valocity, says that implies that many people are opting to use the increase in their equity on residentia­l property to either purchase additional property or other goods.

“Increasing­ly, Kiwis see the growing equity in their homes as something that can be used to buy new cars or boats, update kitchens or bathrooms or to consolidat­e other debt,” he says.

“Given the significan­t capital gains over the last five years and the historical­ly low interest rate, that’s not entirely unexpected.

“For most people, their biggest wealth is their home, so if you reach retirement with a higher debt to equity ratio, choices are confined.” – Troy Churton, CFFC national manager retirement villages

However, this may result in borrowers carrying a mortgage for a lot longer, even in some cases having to delay retirement in order to service the loan.”

Today, nearly four in ten (39 percent) of the mortgagees are to first home buyers (in Auckland it’s 38 percent), only 14 percent to investors with three or more properties. Mortgage prisoners As recently as four years ago, when the Commission for Financial Capability (CFFC) surveyed New Zealanders about their retirement plans, nearly eight in ten people expected to be in their own mortgage-free home. And right through the 1990s to the 2010s, this was true, according to the Ministry for Social Developmen­t incomes report.

But recent monitors show that this is rapidly declining. Today, only 70 percent of people over 65 own their house freehold. But more importantl­y, of the next generation coming up to retirement (those in the 50-64 age bracket) less than four in ten (38 percent) has kicked the mortgage. The rosy retirement nest egg is evaporatin­g.

“This has been trending down for the past 20 years, and commentato­rs would say that’s expected to continue,” says CFFC managing editor Tom Hartmann. “This may mean that people buy houses later (and keep paying the mortgage to just before retirement) or that they take out longer mortgages. We do not know if the current 55-64 year olds, once they reach 65 years, will be in a situation as good as the current 65 year olds.”

A study released in 2017 by consumer credit informatio­n Credit Simple (a division of credit registry Illion, formerly Dun & Bradstreet) found that debt-free retirement is moving out of reach for New Zealanders. People over 55 make an increasing proportion of bankruptci­es - 28 percent, up from 21 percent in 2010 - and still hold 28 percent of mortgages, at an average value of $321,000. Worse, paying it off by 65 is not happening: people over that age still hold eight per cent of all mortgages (they are 14 percent of the population) and owe an average of $232,000.

Add that to other debts - over 65s have four percent of personal loans and 16 percent of credit card debt (average $11,135) - and the crunch continues.

That means that many older New Zealanders are planning to keep working well past retirement. Already, three quarters of 60 to 64 year olds are still working, compared to only half that number back in the 1980s, and data from the University of Auckland Retirement Policy and Research Centre suggest that New Zealand’s proportion of working over-65 year olds will grow to be one of the highest in the OECD. BNZ’s Financial Futures monitor found 46 percent of Kiwis plan to keep working beyond 65.

For some retired people four out of ten - super is all the income they have, CFFC research found. And for a further three quarters of people 65 and over, more than half of their income comes only from NZ Super. CFFC found that only 11 percent of near-retirees think they have enough to live on, and 46 percent don’t have a financial plan.

That means that today some 41,000 people on superannua­tion rely on government accommodat­ion supplement­s, a number that’s predicted to grow as more people rent, not own. While today only 14 percent of seniors over 65 rent, by 2036, that’s projected to reach 24 percent.

“For most people, their biggest investment is their home, so if you reach retirement with a higher debt to equity ratio, your choices for de-cumulating are confined,” says Troy Churton, national manager retirement villages for CFFC. “Your accommodat­ion options become about right sizing, finding new ways of working, or even relocating to another town.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand