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Exploring the Resilience of Australia’s Home Loan Markets Despite RBA Rate Hikes

Riya Thomas by Riya Thomas
June 21, 2023
in Real Estate, Top Stories
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Exploring the Resilience of Australia’s Home Loan Markets Despite RBA Rate Hikes

Exploring the Resilience of Australia’s Home Loan Markets Despite RBA Rate Hikes (Source : Shutterstock)

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The stress test indicated that Australia’s top Residential Mortgage-backed Securities will only come under pressure if the Reserve Bank lifts rates above 5% from the current 4.1%. Residential Mortgage-backed Securities are basically debt-based assets that are backed by the interest paid on home loans. 

Australia’s home loan markets can cope effortlessly with another 50 basis points of interest rate hikes without affecting the mortgage arrears to go overboard with sharp increases, according to the S&P Global Ratings. The director of structured finance ratings at S&P, Eric Kitson stated that the hypothetical stress scenario indicates that most of the ratings should be able to resist a moderate level of economic stress.

The stress test indicated that Australia’s top Residential Mortgage-backed Securities will only come under pressure if the Reserve Bank lifts rates above 5% from the current 4.1%. Residential Mortgage-backed Securities are basically debt-based assets that are backed by the interest paid on home loans. 

The RBA had increased up to 4 percentage points of rate hikes in a year and the economy was pretty much resilient to those moves. While this was happening the loan arrears were still contained and the unemployment holding was at a very low level of 3.6%. According to experts, the RBA lifted rates two more times this year reaching 4.6%.

Experts also estimate the debt serviceability pressures to increase in the coming days as a raft of home loans that were fixed were at an all-time low borrowing costs come up for renewal in the upcoming months. Kitson stated that a slowdown in the refinancing activity in the mortgage market especially when the fixed-rate loans are rolling on to higher variable rates could also lead to large increases in arrears. “So far this transition has been well managed,” stated Kitson. 

The Central Bank of Australia plans on raising the interest rates two more times this year to control inflation and overcome the situation which would result in an economic slowdown, especially in terms of growth, reports Bloomberg. Many expect that the Reserve Bank will lift its cash rate to 4.6% by September while Capital Economics and Goldman Sachs Group Inc plan to have three more hikes for a peak of 4.85%. The Reserve Bank of Australia has hiked the rate by 4 percentage points since May 2022, which is one percentage point less than Federal Reserve’s collective increases. 

Economists state that a 25-basis-point increase in July looks like a 50-50 proposition. RBA at the beginning of June conducted a meeting and surveys concluded the arguments were stronger for raising rates to 4.1%. “There is also a risk of a hike at both meetings,” stated Belinda Allen, a senior economist at CBA. The policy decision of the central bank will depend upon the monthly retail sales report and CPI sales indicator figures for May. The full-price setup will only emerge when the quarterly report is published at the end of July as the monthly inflation series fail to capture all goods and market services in the economy. 

Experts have also trimmed their estimates for the growth of the Australian economy to 1.6% for a period of three months through June and down to 0.7% in the fourth quarter. Recession, however, is also looming, and the probability of having one stands at 50% which is also the highest level since the pandemic. Australia has avoided a recession but the economy was driven into reverse by the Covid lockdown during the first half of 2020. Benjamin Picton, a senior strategist at Rabobank stated that they expect to have a slowing down in GDP growth during the second and third quarters this year and estimates to avoid a technical recession.   

Source: short URL
Tags: australiaCOVID-19gdpinflationRBA
Riya Thomas

Riya Thomas

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