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Curbs on lending to foreigners hits Australia’s house price boom

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It’s a winter weekend in Sydney’s bustling northern suburb of Chatswood and a three-bedroom family house sporting an endless garden is up for auction.

It’s priced to sell at A$1.88mn ($1.4mn) but no buyers bite and the sale is abandoned.

On the same day, in the heart of the harbour-hugging city a two-bedroom apartment with panoramic views fails to sell as no bidders turn up.

Auctions are a bellwether of demand in property-obsessed Australia, where attending sales is almost a national pastime.

It is therefore telling that only just over half were successful the weekend last month a Reuters reporter visited some of Sydney’s auctions, compared to more than two-thirds for all of last year.

And while that week was the worst since 2012, it wasn’t a one off.

Auction clearance rates have averaged in the mid-to-low 50% range for each of the past nine weeks.

The recent weakness in the Australian housing market, which has been one of the drivers of an economy that has now grown for 27 years without a downturn, has some economists warning of heightened risks of a recession and even a financial crisis.

In anticipati­on, some hedge funds are shorting the nation’s financial assets and some significan­t investors are heavily underweigh­t Australia compared to regional benchmarks.

The slack has been partly engineered by the authoritie­s.

Curbs on lending to foreigners, foreign buyer taxes and a clampdown on capital flows by Beijing have hurt bubbling demand from Chinese investors, who have been important contributo­rs to the housing boom of recent years.

There are signs of a similar fall in Chinese investment in Vancouver, Canada – which has also been a red hot market in recent years and where the authoritie­s have also intervened by raising taxes on foreign buyers.

But a decline in Vancouver’s sales is yet to translate into price declines.

In Australia, a government-mandated inquiry into the nation’s banks has turned up so many misdeeds that the industry has restrained some lending.

Annual growth in housing credit has braked to four-year lows while building approvals have come off a peak and nationwide home prices have started to fall for the first time in six years.

Home values in Sydney, the country’s largest city, are down 4.4% compared to June last year, the sharpest fall since 2008 and far away from the 19% growth enjoyed early in 2017, according to property consultant CoreLogic.

The annual price increases in Melbourne and Brisbane have braked to around 1%, down from double-digit growth last year.

Investors are taking note.

“We have shifted a greater proportion of our assets offshore as an intensifyi­ng slowdown in housing is likely to increase downward pressure on the Australian dollar,” said Ben McGarry, Sydney-based portfolio manager at A$185mn hedge fund Totus Capital.

He said the fund is “short a selection of Australian retail, constructi­on materials and banking stocks which have benefited from the long bull market in Australian housing,” but declined to identify specific companies.

And a unit of UK fund management group Aviva Investors has taken short bets against Australian assets in the credit and currency markets as the odds of a housing-related downturn have increased, a spokesman for the firm told Reuters on Monday.

He also wouldn’t detail the bets.

The Australian dollar has fallen more than 5% against the US dollar since the beginning of the year.

And there is growing short interest in companies such as building products maker CSR and mortgage insurer Genworth.

Some funds whose policy is to refrain from taking short positions have still reduced their exposure to Australia.

London-based Liontrust Asia Income Fund has 7.5% in Australia, against a benchmark of more than 17% based on the MSCI Asia-Pacific Ex-Japan index, according to fund manager Mark Williams.

“We have a very low weighting in the banks, where if we have any real selloff that’s where it would feed through,” he said.

And California-based Pacific Investment Management Co (PIMCO), one of the largest actively-managed bond funds in the world, says it “is cautious on housing-related investment­s” in Australia, according to Dan Ivascyn, its group chief investment officer.

A modest cool down would be welcome.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has long worried that the speculativ­e bubble in the property market could burst like it did in the United States, hammering banks and the economy.

Mortgages amount to A$1.8tn, or just over 100% of the country’s annual economic output (GDP). That compares to around 91% in the UK and 80% in the US.

A stress test by Australia’s banking watchdog conducted in 2017 showed that if home prices fell 35%, unemployme­nt doubled to 11% and GDP fell 4 percentage points, Australian banks would lose A$40bn on mortgages alone.

But regulators have forced them to squirrel away so much capital that the banks would still be solvent, the test showed.

Policymake­rs have also clamped down on banks’ mortgage lending over the past couple of years, including stiff curbs on buying properties for rent.

This has pushed many speculativ­e buyers out of the market, which is good news for prospectiv­e buyers.

“I have been waiting for this slide to start,” said Arif Hossain, 37-year old biomedical engineer in Western Sydney, who is looking for a four-bedroom house.

“The properties that I am looking for were selling around A$1mn just some months back.

They have now fallen below A$900,000 but still there is no sale,” he added.

He wants prices to drop to A$750,000-A$850,000 before jumping in.

But such declines could be very painful. The government estimates Australia’s 10mn homes are worth A$6.9tn, close to the annual GDP of France and Italy combined.

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