The New Zealand Herald

Odds of big correction in

RBNZ says no ‘flashing red alert’ but some stabilisat­ion needed

- Tamsyn Parker

The likelihood of a “significan­t correction” in the housing market has increased and the Government’s recent property investment tax changes are one of the factors behind it, the Reserve Bank says. Speaking after the release of its sixmonthly Financial Stability Report deputy Reserve Bank governor Geoff Bascand said it believed there was a greater risk of a correction than a number of years prior. “It has been building a little with house prices rising. The challenge is whether house prices move ahead of the fundamenta­l drivers before that.”

Bascand said what it had seen recently was population growth starting to slow, increased house building and the Government announce a number of tax policy changes as well regulatory initiative­s instigated by the Reserve Bank itself. “We think the fundamenta­l drivers for long-term house prices are probably softening and in which case if prices move in the opposite direction the chance of correction is higher. “It is not a flashing red alert but it is a concern and [we are expressing] a desire to see some stabilisat­ion.” House prices have risen 24 per cent in the year to March, a rise much higher than that seen in other countries.

The RBNZ report said house prices appeared to be “stretched” by several metrics including house price-toincome ratios and the affordabil­ity of entering the market.

Its data shows the 20 per cent deposit on a median priced house has risen from around $135,000 in 2004 to over $220,000.

The Reserve Bank report noted resilient household incomes, bolstered by wage subsidies, strong migration flows prior to the border restrictio­ns and low domestic interest rates had all fuelled the recent surge in demand for housing.

“The cost of servicing a new mortgage compared to renting remains relatively low, and the rental returns based on concurrent house prices have declined to a lesser extent than long-term risk-free rates in recent years. These factors point to a degree of sustainabi­lity in the current level of prices.”

But it said the current demand and supply conditions may prove temporary and were subject to uncertaint­y citing the example of mortgage interest rates.

“The future path of mortgage interest rates depends on the evolution of inflationa­ry pressure and adjustment­s of the monetary policy stance at home and abroad relative to neutral rates, as well as credit risk in the housing market. Estimates of trend interest rates are higher than current levels.”

The report also cited that the Government’s March 23 announceme­nts to extend the bright-line property tax and the phased removal of interest expense deductibil­ity would over time reduce the returns on property investment, particular­ly at high levels of leverage.

“Taken together, the various downside risks to house prices mean that the likelihood of a significan­t correction has increased.”

The report also noted that a longerrun determinan­t of the house price level was “inelastic housing supply”.

“If land developmen­t and constructi­on could respond effectivel­y to price signals then any change in demand would have only a shortlived effect on house prices. Ultimately, for the housing affordabil­ity problem to be resolved, policy constraint­s on supply need to be addressed.”

The report warned that New Zealand households face significan­t risks in the medium term including the potential for higher debt-servicing costs and a significan­t decline in house prices which could amplify an economic downturn.

Higher house prices have boosted home-owners’ equity but have also driven household debts higher with mortgage lending growing 10 per cent in the year to March 31.

At the same lending standards have slipped.

“The resurgence in mortgage lending growth has occurred alongside an easing in originatio­n standards. The serviceabi­lity test rate levels that banks use to assess new borrowers have generally declined over the past

year.”

New mortgages taken out in the last two years now make up 30 per cent of mortgage lending and the Reserve Bank says newer borrowers are more vulnerable as they have repaid less principle and have seen smaller equity gains.

The size of new mortgages relative to borrowers’ incomes has increased with the share of new investor lending with a debt-toincome ratio above five rising to 69 per cent in the March quarter from 55 per cent a year earlier.

The share of high debt-to-income ratio lending for owner-occupiers had also risen but off a low base.

Meanwhile the share of new lending on interest-only terms had trended down over time.

Reserve Bank estimates suggest that, for a typical recent owneroccup­ier borrower, an increase in the one-year mortgage rate to 5 per cent — it is currently around 2.25 per cent — would increase their debt servicing ratio from around 30 per cent to above 40 per cent.

“Large increases in debt serviceabi­lity burdens can produce negative feedback effects on the economy, as highly indebted households reduce their consumptio­n spending and dis

tressed borrowers [default on] loans.”

Bascand said a high proportion of new lending had been done at high debt-to-income and loan-to-value ratios which made recent borrowers more vulnerable to a rise in mortgage rates and exposes households and the financial system to a fall in house prices.

“We will be watching how market conditions respond to the Government’s recent policy changes. If required, we are prepared to further tighten lending conditions for housing using LVR requiremen­ts or additional tools that we are assessing,” he said.

The Reserve Bank is assessing four policy options for addressing the issue of sustainabl­e house prices; further LVR tightening, restrictio­ns

based on debt to income, restrictio­ns on interest-only lending and changes to sectoral capital requiremen­ts.

The report noted that if further tightening in policy settings was needed in the short term the easiest approach would be to tighten LVR restrictio­ns further.

“However the marginal benefits are likely to decline as LVR restrictio­ns tighten further while efficiency costs would rise.”

Instead it viewed the best option as a debt serviceabi­lity tool. This could come in the form of debt-toincome lending restrictio­ns which would limit how much someone can borrow based on their income.

“Restrictio­ns on interest-only lending would likely have less impact on overall lending conditions than the alternativ­e, while being challengin­g to implement.”

The Reserve Bank already collects data on DTIs but said further work would be needed to finalise the design of the tool and update bank systems.

Bascand said it would be reporting to the minister in the coming months on the options.

For now it was in a watch and see phase on how current measures would play out, he said.

For the housing affordabil­ity problem to be resolved, policy constraint­s on supply need to be addressed. RBNZ statement

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 ?? Photo / Mike Scott ?? Reserve bank chief Adrian Orr has stressed how hard it would be to target specific sectors such as investors with macro-prudential tools.
Photo / Mike Scott Reserve bank chief Adrian Orr has stressed how hard it would be to target specific sectors such as investors with macro-prudential tools.
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