Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka mulls to limit credit flow to real estate sector

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Aregulator­y credit crunch may likely be implemente­d for the constructi­on and real estate sectors to protect the financial system, the Sri Lankan government had said in a letter to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

“To strengthen our financial system, we intend to undertake several measures: Deploy, as needed, macro-prudential tools such as a sector-specific limit on the loanto-value ratio including in the constructi­on and real estate sectors,” the letter said.

Signed by Finance and Mass Media Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a and the Central Bank Governor Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswa­my, the letter indicates the continuous­ly rising concerns of the regulators over the possibilit­y of an asset bubble.

The letter was written in June and published in the report for the Second Review of the IMF’S US$ 1.5 billion Extended Fund Facility, but Dr. Coomaraswa­my had issued cautious statements over a possible asset bubble stemming from luxury apartments over the preceding months.

He had also said that private credit has to be observed to discern whether loans taken for other purposes are leaking into real estate.

It was recently revealed that his comments had followed dwindling pre-sales of apartments, possibly driven by reduced economic expectatio­ns and tighter monetary policy, instead of the comments causing the decline as believed by real estate firms.

Lower pre-sales may cause property developers and in turn constructi­on firms to depend on alternativ­e finances to complete projects. However, developers insist that they have not started projects for which a majority of costs have been covered through pre-sales.

Fortune 500 real estate consultant firm JLL has forecasted that the supply of property developmen­t will eventually be absorbed by the market.

Many artificial elements are pushing up real estate prices in Colombo, as reported by Mirror Business last week.

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