The Urban Developer
AdvertiseEventsWebinarsUrbanity
Industry Excellence
Urban Leader
Sign In
Membership
Latest
Menu
Location
Sector
Category
Content
Type
Newsletters
JOIN US FOR A ONE-DAY DEEP DIVE INTO THE FUTURE OF THE INDUSTRIAL SECTOR
FIND OUT HOW THE INDUSTRIAL MARKET IS CHANGING IN 2026
LEARN MOREDETAILS
TheUrbanDeveloper
Follow
About
About Us
Membership
Awards
Events
Webinars
Listings
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
4
print
Print
OtherDinah Lewis BoucherWed 10 Jun 20

Home Loans Post Biggest Fall Since 2015

e83fa911-89fc-4334-8667-abfdb6f122a0

New housing finance approvals fell 4.8 per cent in April, the sharpest month-on month decline since 2015, but a milder fall to the 10 per cent pull-back some economists had tipped.

New loans to owner-occupiers declined 5 per cent in April, while lending to investors, which has been falling since February, declined 4.2 per cent, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures released Wednesday.

While this was a smaller drop than expected by the market, senior ANZ economists Adelaide Timbrell and David Plank expect house lending to be soft in the period ahead, as income pandemic-related disruptions erode both borrowing capacity and the risk appetite of households.

“We expect the weakness in finance to flow into lower house prices and a deteriorating construction outlook, only offset slightly by the homebuilder stimulus,” Timbrell said.

Figures show refinancing was up, with a record $7.9 billion in home loans refinanced in April.

CommSec chief economist Craig James says this figure was up by 50 per cent in a year.

“One part of the home finance market that has been going gangbusters is refinancing of loans,” James said.

“Home buyers have taken advantage of super-low rates to shore up their finances.”

The Bureau of Statistics said April’s figures largely reflect loan applications submitted in March before major Covid-related restrictions introduced.

Following weak turnover, BIS Oxford Economics economist Maree Kilroy says mortgage approvals are expected to contract further in May.

“The easing of restrictions on live auctions and open house inspections will see new housing loans gradually recover over the subsequent months,” Kilroy said.

“The recently announced Home Builder program will provide material support for new construction loans, but this will not be evident until the end of 2020.”

Lending indicators is released monthly by the ABS, containing figures on new housing, personal, commercial and lease finance commitments.

How will the housing market hold up?

UBS economists upgraded their price forecasts for Australia’s housing market on Friday, with fresh predictions home prices could fall by between 5 and 10 per cent over the next year, an upgrade from its previous forecast of at least a 10 per cent drop.

James added that Australia's home prices aren’t sliding and interest rates are at a record low.

“The job market will be fundamental to prospects but the good news is that federal treasury is now looking at an 8 per cent peak for the jobless rate rather than 10 per cent,” he said.

“The other area to watch is the drying up of in-bound migration, a factor that will serve to restrain home purchase demand.”

Recent Corelogic data shows that capital city home prices have eased by 0.4 per cent over the past month.


ResidentialAustraliaFinanceReal EstateSector
AUTHOR
Dinah Lewis Boucher
More articles by this author
ADVERTISEMENT
TOP STORIES
Exclusive

Queensland Decade of Gigaprojects a Developer’s Goldmine

Phil Bartsch
5 Min
Multiplex Moderna facility
Exclusive

Industrial Subsectors Win Investor Attention as Demand Blossoms

Clare Burnett
7 Min
Bee Bricks hero
Exclusive

Beyond Green: The Rise of Net-Positive Architecture in Australia

Clare Burnett
7 Min
Exclusive

Central Element Hotel Debut Spearheads Oxford Street Renewal

Taryn Paris
8 Min
London skyline near the walkie talkie tower showing the 85 gracechurch street development.
Exclusive

Basilica to Business: London Office Tower’s Historic Rework

Renee McKeown
6 Min
View All >
Planning

Melbourne Blocks Released Under Small Sites Push

Lindsay Saunders
Affordable Townsville hero
Affordable & Social Housing

Greenfield 258-Unit Affordable Plans Launched for Townsville

Clare Burnett
Fortis tops out 122 Moray Street commercial project HERO
Office

Fortis Tops Out $50m South Melbourne Office Scheme

Leon Della Bosca
Almost half the floorspace of the Moray Street block will become the Melbourne headquarters of the developer’s parent co…
LATEST
Planning

Melbourne Blocks Released Under Small Sites Push

Lindsay Saunders
2 Min
Affordable Townsville hero
Affordable & Social Housing

Greenfield 258-Unit Affordable Plans Launched for Townsville

Clare Burnett
2 Min
Fortis tops out 122 Moray Street commercial project HERO
Office

Fortis Tops Out $50m South Melbourne Office Scheme

Leon Della Bosca
2 Min
With new office space becoming unfeasible, Deicorp is pivoting to mixed hotel-residential mid-construction.
Office

Deicorp Plots Offices-to-Hotel Crows Nest Tower Switch

Patrick Lau
5 Min
View All >
ADVERTISEMENT
Article originally posted at: https://www.theurbandeveloper.com/articles/home-loans-biggest-fall-since-2015-abs