Weekend Herald

Capital flow in rural sector

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Capital flow is always a fundamenta­l factor in the property market and the rural sector is no exception.

There are two key financial drivers affecting the rural market at present, says Ruth Hodges, National CoDirector of Rural and Agribusine­ss at Colliers Internatio­nal.

“Ongoing tightening of the restrictio­ns on overseas buyers continues to constrain the flow of capital coming in from offshore.

“Adding to this, is the climate for finance with bank lending on most rural and agricultur­e sectors also restrained as banks seek to re-capitalise their books.”

Andrew Laming, Director of NZAB says that the latest RBNZ data for the quarter ending 31 March 2020 sheds some light on the finance climate in the rural sector.

“Banks’ appetite for lending can be driven by this data, both proactivel­y and re-actively so it provides useful insight into both what they are currently doing and their intentions.

“Overall, rural and agribusine­ss debt went down by over $1 billion in the last six months. This shows incredibly strong discipline from farming businesses, which is a trend we started to see at the beginning of 2019.

According to the RBNZ, total loans across all sectors of consumer, home, business, commercial and agribusine­ss, grew by $11 billion over the same period.

Laming says this shows the agricultur­al sector is doing the heavy lifting when it comes to paying back debt in New Zealand.

“The market share of rural and agribusine­ss loans has stayed relatively constant between the banks with ANZ still holding the largest share.

“The biggest changes were ASB, which moved into fourth place behind Rabobank, and BNZ, both shedding up to $550 million in rural and agribusine­ss loans each over the last six months.

“Rabobank and Westpac continue to be the big growers, but of late, we’ve seen ASB increasing their market presence significan­tly.”

Laming says a decrease in rural and agribusine­ss non-performing loans overall is both positive and negative for the sector. “It is good that the debt is being repaid but it shows lower reinvestme­nt into the sector.”

Richard Kirke, Internatio­nal Director of Capital Markets for Colliers, says the inability and reluctance of banks to lend into the agricultur­al sector has broadened in the first two quarters of 2020 to include virtually all non-residentia­l sectors.

This has created significan­t opportunit­y for non-bank lenders to enter the market.

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