The Post

Relief on horizon for home-buyers

Three General Manager Positions

- 04 566 5591 • www.stansborou­gh.co.nz Susan Edmunds

It may soon be a little easier to get a home loan.

The Reserve Bank has flagged that it is evaluating whether to ease restrictio­ns on lending to borrowers with low deposits.

At the moment only 15 per cent of new lending can be to borrowers with less than 20 per cent deposit, and 5 per cent of lending to investors with less than 35 per cent.

The introducti­on of the investor rule in particular has been credited for taking the heat out of the Auckland property market.

In a speech to the UBS Australasi­a Conference in Sydney yesterday, deputy governor Geoff Bascand said it was pondering the future of the loan-to-value restrictio­ns (LVRs). ‘‘Loan-to-value ratios were introduced to address elevated risks in the housing market. We keep LVR settings under regular review. The question we are assessing in the upcoming Financial Stability Report is whether the same restrictio­ns are needed in the current environmen­t, where debt levels remain high but are not deteriorat­ing, now that bank lending standards have tightened significan­tly and rapid growth in credit and house prices have stabilised. If these conditions continue, we expect to gradually ease the policy in coming years.’’

Bascand said the restrictio­ns had done their intended job. At the time they were introduced, low-deposit loans exceeded 20 per cent of all outstandin­g loans. He said two-thirds of systemic banking crises around the world had been preceded by a housing boom and bust.

‘‘Highly indebted households are vulnerable to shocks, such as higher interest rates or unemployme­nt, that reduce their debt-servicing capacity. This can lead to households cutting their consumptio­n, selling their house or, if the shock is severe enough, defaulting on their loans.’’

Household indebtedne­ss has increased dramatical­ly in New Zealand during the past 30 years. In 1988, the average household owed around $16,000 and had an income of around $35,000 – a debt-toincome ratio of 46 per cent. By the end of 2017, this ratio had risen to 168 per cent, following a 10-fold increase in average household debt to nearly $160,000, while average incomes had only slightly less than tripled to $95,000.

Bascand said the LVR rules had been important to the significan­t increase in financial system risks associated with mortgage loans over the past five years.

‘Highly indebted households are vulnerable to shocks such as higher interest rates.’ Geoff Bascand, Reserve Bank

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