The Urban Developer
AdvertiseEventsWebinars
Urbanity
Awards
Sign In
Membership
Latest
Menu
Location
Sector
Category
Content
Type
Newsletters
Untitled design (8)
FIRST RELEASE TICKETS ON SALE FOR URBANITY-25 THE UNMISSABLE EVENT FOR PROPERTY PROFESSIONALS IN THE ASIA PACIFIC
FIRST TICKETS ON SALE FOR URBANITY-25 UNMISSABLE FOR PROPERTY PROFESSIONALS
SEE DETAILSDETAILS
TheUrbanDeveloper
Follow
About
About Us
Membership
Awards
Events
Webinars
Listings
Partner Lab
Resources
Terms & Conditions
Commenting Policy
Privacy Policy
Republishing Guidelines
Editorial Charter
Complaints Handling Policy
Contact
General Enquiries
Advertise
Contribution Enquiry
Project Submission
Membership Enquiry
Newsletter
Stay up to date and with the latest news, projects, deals and features.
Subscribe
ADVERTISEMENT
SHARE
print
Print
OtherLindsay SaundersFri 03 Mar 23

First Home Buyer Loans Slump to Six-Year Low

abs lending january 2023

The number of new owner-occupier first home buyer loan commitments has fallen to its lowest level since February 2017.

According to new data from the ABS, of new owner-occupier first home buyer loan commitments fell 8.1 per cent, or $610 million, in January.

The overall value of new loan commitments for housing fell 5.3 per cent to $22.1 billion in January.

The value of total new owner-occupier loan commitments fell 4.9 per cent to $14.7 billion, while new investor loan commitments fell 6.0 per cent to $7.4 billion.

Every state recorded a fall except the ACT which was up 7.2 per cent.

Victoria’s 9.8 per cent fall was the worst, followed by NSW’s -4.9 per cent and WA with -5.4 per cent.

The value of owner-occupier housing loan refinancing between lenders fell 1.9 per cent but remained close to record highs at $12.7 billion. Borrowers continued to switch lenders for lower interest rates as the RBA’s cash rate target rose.

null
▲ The continuing decline is unsurprisingly being blamed on rising interest rates.

ABS head of finance and wealth statistics Mish Tan said first-home buyer lending continued to decline from the high reached in January, 2021. The decline coincided with the winding down of Covid stimulus measures.

“Anecdotal feedback from lenders suggested that reduced borrowing capacity due to rising interest rates further dampened overall demand for new housing loans in recent months,” she said.

In January in seasonally adjusted terms, the value of new loan commitments for construction finance fell 2.5 per cent after a rise of 99.4 per cent in December.

Loans for the purchase of property fell 0.7 per cent, after a fall of 6.6 cent the previous month.

The data continues to reflect the weight of interest rate increases which occurred in 2022, and before the RBA increased the rate again in February, with the promise of more rate increases to come.

HIA senior economist Tom Devitt said there were significant lags evident in this cycle and “we are unlikely to see the bottom in this data until the second half of the year, at the earliest”.

“The higher cash rate is compounding the adverse impact of the rising cost of materials, labour and land as well as the increased costs of compliance with the building code,” he said.

“There remains a large volume of work under way that will be completed in 2023 and this will keep national unemployment exceptionally low until early 2024.

“By continuing to raise rates the RBA risks a longer and deeper slowdown in economic growth than is necessary.”

Personal finance


The value of total new loan commitments for fixed term personal finance rose 0.5 per cent.

Lending for the purchase of road vehicles fell 0.4 per cent, while lending for the purchase of household goods rose 6.2 per cent to another record high.

Meanwhile lending for travel and holidays rose 0.9 per cent to the highest level seen since late 2018.

ResidentialAustraliaReal EstateFinanceSector
AUTHOR
Lindsay Saunders
The Urban Developer - News Editor
More articles by this author
linkedin icon
ADVERTISEMENT
TOP STORIES
MONARK co-founders Michael Kark (CEO) and Adam Slade-Jacobson (CIO)
Exclusive

Finding the Sweet Spot: How Monark Built its $2bn Property Empire

Leon Della Bosca
6 Min
Exclusive

Sydney’s Fear of Heights Holding Back Housing

Vanessa Croll
6 Min
North Melbourne Craigieburn HB Land EDM
Exclusive

Tribunal Finding Cruels 1000-Home Melbourne Plan

Clare Burnett
5 Min
Roseville Hycorp EDM
Exclusive

Ku-ring-gai TOD Backflip Slashes 1500 Homes from Under-Way Developments

Clare Burnett
7 Min
Exclusive

Housing Fix Sprint Begins with New Top Planner Pushing 13 Regional Plans

Phil Bartsch
8 Min
View All >
MONARK co-founders Michael Kark (CEO) and Adam Slade-Jacobson (CIO)
Exclusive

Finding the Sweet Spot: How Monark Built its $2bn Property Empire

Leon Della Bosca
Labrador Midrise Whiting Street DA hero
Residential

Labrador Scheme Joins Gold Coast Midrise Surge

Phil Bartsch
Indroo Verso 53 Coonan Street DA hero
Development

Tower Pitched as Brisbane’s Inner-West Regains Steam

Phil Bartsch
The proposal rising 20 storeys and comprising 119 units is part of a renewed vanguard pushing residential density to new…
LATEST
MONARK co-founders Michael Kark (CEO) and Adam Slade-Jacobson (CIO)
Exclusive

Finding the Sweet Spot: How Monark Built its $2bn Property Empire

Leon Della Bosca
6 Min
Labrador Midrise Whiting Street DA hero
Residential

Labrador Scheme Joins Gold Coast Midrise Surge

Phil Bartsch
2 Min
Indroo Verso 53 Coonan Street DA hero
Development

Tower Pitched as Brisbane’s Inner-West Regains Steam

Phil Bartsch
3 Min
Clarke Hopkins Clarke's rendering of the clubhouse for Levande's Highton seniors living project in Geelong.
Retirement & Aged Care

Seniors Living Plan Revealed for Former Geelong Van Park

Marisa Wikramanayake
2 Min
View All >
ADVERTISEMENT
Article originally posted at: https://theurbandeveloper.com/articles/abs-lending-indicators-january-2023