Mortgage lending flows rise for the first time since 2021

Mortgage lending flows rise for the first time since 2021

0 개 1,079 KoreaPost

By CoreLogic NZ Chief Property Economist, Kelvin Davidson

Mortgage lending activity was higher in August than a year ago – the first annual rise for about two years. Part of this early-stage recovery relates to the loosening in the loan to value ratio rules from 1st June. Looking ahead, more growth in lending activity (and property sales volumes and house prices) seems likely, but it might still be fairly subdued by past standards.

The latest data from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) showed that there was $5.8bn of gross mortgage lending activity in August, up by $0.4bn from a year ago. This is the first annual rise in lending volumes since August 2021. (These figures cover new loans, top-ups, and bank switches, but not existing loans that are being repriced).

   


Within that overall total, the breakdown of the figures showed that owner-occupiers borrowed more this August than the same month last year, but investors were on a par with a year ago. That softer performance from investors is hardly surprising, given the cashflow pressures on an investment purchase that are currently arising from low gross rental yields and high mortgage rates.

Meanwhile, interest-only lending remains ‘under control’, with about 36% of loans to investors in August being done on this basis (compared to a cyclical peak of 46% in July/August last year) and a figure of only about 14% for owner-occupiers, compared to around 20% a year ago.

Perhaps the most interesting cut of these figures, however, is still the breakdown by loan to value ratio (LVR), which showed that lending to investors who don’t have the required 35% deposit (unless going new-build) remains almost non-existent. By contrast, given the relaxation of the LVR rules from 1st June, the past few months have shown a sharp rise in the share of lending to investors with a 35-40% deposit (see the first chart) – a group precluded by the previous LVR settings.

1. % of lending at high LVR (Source: RBNZ)

1fe3cb94c264d69fe148c6a9b1b4ff64_1695776705_171.jpg
 

Of course, it’s also worth reiterating that overall investor lending flows remain subdued, and that their purchasing activity in the market is also still fairly muted. In other words, those investors borrowing with a 35-40% deposit (or 60-65% LVR) may be topping up existing loans or switching banks, rather than actively buying more properties.

Similarly, low-deposit lending to owner-occupiers has also risen lately, from around 6% of activity in May to 8-9% now – still below the (new) 15% speed limit, but nevertheless the highest share since late 2021. In turn, a high share (around 75%) of those low-deposit flows for owner-occupiers is actually absorbed by first home buyers (see the second chart).

2. High LVR lending to first home buyers (Source: RBNZ)

1fe3cb94c264d69fe148c6a9b1b4ff64_1695776754_2264.jpg
 

In addition, today’s release from the RBNZ also contained the latest update to the newly-published breakdown covering ‘loan purpose’ – i.e. to purchase a property, switch banks, or top up an existing loan. These figures showed that top-ups and bank switches have remained relatively stable in the past few months, but house purchase loans are showing early signs of an upturn.

Overall, then, it’s early days, but the latest mortgage lending figures add to other evidence that the housing market downturn has (all but) ended, helped in part by the loosening of the LVR rules from 1st June, and also relaxed CCCFA rules one month prior to that.

   

However, we’re cautious about the speed and scale of any near-term rebound in property sales, lending volumes, or house prices. After all, mortgage rates aren’t likely to fall significantly anytime soon (maybe not for at least another year) and the serviceability test rates certainly remain a key hurdle for many would-be borrowers at present. Indeed, high mortgage rates have recently been a key factor limiting the size of loans in relation to incomes (see the third chart), given they restrict how much debt that can actually be serviced from a given wage.

3. % of lending at DTI >7 (Source: RBNZ)

1fe3cb94c264d69fe148c6a9b1b4ff64_1695776798_1863.jpg
 

On that note, we still think there’s a reasonable chance that formal caps on debt to income (DTI) ratios will be imposed by the RBNZ in 2024. To be fair, given that high DTI lending has already fallen, formal caps may not actually do much straightaway. But if imposed, they’d mean the RBNZ is already ‘ahead of the curve’ for when interest rates do eventually fall again and possible financial stability risks from larger new mortgages re-emerge.

In the long run, DTIs would tend to tie house prices more closely to incomes (which grow slower than the historical rate of house price inflation we’ve seen in NZ over the past 20-30 years), and also limit the number of properties that anybody can own until there’s been sufficient time (maybe five to seven years) for their incomes to grow enough to allow the next purchase.

ENDS


Source: CoreLogic NZ

Weaker property prices mean more 'bang for bu…

댓글 0 | 조회 920 | 2일전
The country's first home … 더보기

House prices flatten in April

댓글 0 | 조회 468 | 8일전
Home value growth in Aote… 더보기

Government cuts put 130 jobs on the line at K…

댓글 0 | 조회 344 | 8일전
The Government's cuts to … 더보기

Borrowers bet on rate cuts by locking in shor…

댓글 0 | 조회 572 | 2024.04.18
Kiwi borrowers are bettin… 더보기

Business as usual for cash rate and housing m…

댓글 0 | 조회 274 | 2024.04.10
Commentary by CoreLogic N… 더보기

Residential recovery sluggish in first quarte…

댓글 0 | 조회 277 | 2024.04.09
Residential property valu… 더보기

Soft start for NZ housing market in March qua…

댓글 0 | 조회 640 | 2024.04.04
CoreLogic's House Price I… 더보기

The new-build premium could be about to shrin…

댓글 0 | 조회 335 | 2024.03.30
We estimate that new-buil… 더보기

STARS OF TV AND SYMPHONY ALIGN FOR CHILDREN’S…

댓글 0 | 조회 375 | 2024.03.19
Howls of What's the time … 더보기

Housing recovery spreads to nearly 60% of NZ …

댓글 0 | 조회 412 | 2024.03.14
Property values rose in a… 더보기

Annual growth back in black despite flat Febr…

댓글 0 | 조회 456 | 2024.03.12
Property values are sligh… 더보기

No OCR change... for now

댓글 0 | 조회 731 | 2024.02.28
Today's decision by the R… 더보기

Construction cost growth continuing to cool

댓글 0 | 조회 344 | 2024.02.28
The average cost of build… 더보기

Property sale volumes remain erratic

댓글 0 | 조회 626 | 2024.02.20
High mortgage rates conti… 더보기

Home values continue to strengthen, slowly bu…

댓글 0 | 조회 736 | 2024.02.13
The housing market's slow… 더보기

Profitable resales rise for the first time in…

댓글 0 | 조회 633 | 2024.02.08
93.3% of property resales… 더보기

MetService launches push notifications for Ne…

댓글 0 | 조회 571 | 2024.01.25
From today 25 January, Ki… 더보기

Property market signs off 2023 on a strong no…

댓글 0 | 조회 523 | 2024.01.17
The CoreLogic House Price… 더보기

Heat comes out of the construction sector as …

댓글 0 | 조회 441 | 2024.01.11
As pressures on residenti… 더보기

What the shortened Brightline test means for …

댓글 0 | 조회 533 | 2023.12.21
Following the Government’… 더보기

Housing upturn broadens, but underwhelming 20…

댓글 0 | 조회 740 | 2023.12.20
TheCoreLogic NZ December … 더보기

Slow recovery to be continued in 2024

댓글 0 | 조회 572 | 2023.12.19
The housing market contin… 더보기

New Zealanders' Standard of Living in Freefal…

댓글 0 | 조회 971 | 2023.12.14
Responding to today’s rel… 더보기

A turning point for the NZ housing market

댓글 0 | 조회 694 | 2023.12.13
A 'year of two halves' ap… 더보기

10 things to know about mortgage debt right n…

댓글 0 | 조회 1,217 | 2023.12.06
The housing loan market h… 더보기