Over the past two RBA monetary policy meetings, the minutes released have revealed a somewhat positive outlook on the housing market. The minutes for the September 3rd meeting reiterated the view that the housing sector has continued to show signs of development. It also outlined that low interest rates have contributed to the improvement in the housing sector.
What is worrying here is the fact that the central bank has failed to identify how this could contribute to another boom-bust housing cycle. Australian homes are already regarded as overvalued, and as the mining boom cools, it is easy for the central bank to become more reliant on the housing sector as a source of growth. The recent uptrend in housing figures from Australia has confirmed this, and with household debt currently at 150% of GDP the Australian housing market is definitely something to monitor.
Even the Aussie’s neighbours have taken steps. The central bank of New Zealand have already acknowledged the potential risk to their economy and have put in place macro prudential policies, such as loan to value ratio restrictions, in order to curb housing related credit growth and price pressure. RBNZ Governor Wheeler outlined that this would help better position banks in the event of shocks, limiting damage to the housing sector and the economy.
The chart below shows the world’s most overvalued economies, with Australia not too far behind New Zealand.
Source: OECD
Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX
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