Uptick in home lending / rates on hold for now

From the Sydney Morning Herald
-Housing steadies: home loans rise again October 12, 2011 - 11:38AM


The housing sector is stabilising as talk of an interest rate rise wanes and Australians are encouraged to borrow more, economists say.

The number of home loans approved in August rose 1.2 per cent to 50,965, official figures show. Economists’ forecasts had centred on a 1 per cent rise in housing finance commitments for the month.

August was the fifth straight month that housing finance commitments had risen.

Advertisement: Story continues below The Australian Bureau of Statistics said total housing finance by value rose 1.0 per cent in August, seasonally adjusted, to $20.848 billion.

JPMorgan economist Ben Jarman said the figures showed the housing sector was stabilising rather than rebounding.

‘‘It certainly means it’s not falling into a hole,’’ Mr Jarman said. ‘‘In the last few months worth of data, the housing finance figures have benefited from the perception that the RBA won’t be doing much in the near term.

‘‘So, if you went back to the start of this year, the RBA didn’t hike rates but there was all the forecast and all the language were making noises that you would get a couple of hikes this year.

‘‘Those aren’t being delivered and things offshore have turned a little bit sour.

‘‘What you’ve seen in the last few months in the home loans data is these fading expectations are helping out and people are coming back and they are happy to take on new debt.

‘‘We’re kind of calling this a mini-rally, but don’t think that this is the start of a tear away in the housing market.

‘‘There’s still a lot of uncertainty globally and that’s what’s keeping the RBA on the sidelines.’’

Mr Jarman said JPMorgan still expected the RBA not to change the cash rate from its current 4.75 per cent until at least the middle of 2012.

‘‘You’ve got a lot uncertainty offshore couterbalancing the domestic inflationary situation here and we see the RBA not doing very much for a while.’’

ICAP senior economist Adam Carr said August’s housing finance figure was a good result and continued a 13 per cent increase in lending since April.

‘‘The pattern we’ve witnessed over the last year is that home lending is posting a dramatic improvement after a GFC induced slump, interrupted only by the floods and the disasters,’’ Mr Carr said. ‘‘Now we’re back on track.’’He expected housing finance data to continue to be strong in the coming months.

‘‘Financial conditions are not too tight, we’ve had an easing in financial conditions (and) lending rates are going sharply lower.

‘‘Don’t forget the unemployment rate is low and income growth is strong, so the prospects are really good.’’

The data also highlighted why a cut in the cash rate was not needed, he said.

‘‘The reason I say that is because the economy is healthy - we don’t need one or two rate cuts.

‘‘We’re either going to get 100 basis points worth of cuts or more because Europe collapses and we have another GFC or, I would imagine, we get none.

‘‘That’s because retailing is accelerating, home lending is accelerating, approvals are accelerating and the unemployment rate is low.

‘‘To argue that we need one or two rate cuts is just absurd.’’

AAP


I think the RBA will leave cash rates on hold for the forseeable future / until something changes.
 

‘‘The reason I say that is because the economy is healthy - we don’t need one or two rate cuts.


‘‘That’s because retailing is accelerating, home lending is accelerating, approvals are accelerating and the unemployment rate is low.


AAP[/I]

I think the RBA will leave cash rates on hold for the forseeable future / until something changes.


Yeah; let's see how the traditional Xmas trading period goes this year. I'm tippin' pretty bad.

Marty, you're and MB; how is your business going right now - is there lots more enquiry, coupled with matching loan approvals, or is there still not many approvals with increased enquiry, or is there less enquiry and approvals?

What is the climate as you see it from your industry?

From my corner of the earth, things are still bad out there in retail/business land, and employment is not on the increase.

Consumer confidence is low, house prices are not doing anything generally, cost of living is up and so on.

Hell; even the big players in retail everywhere are doing scary deals to get a sale.

Our fridge died over that weekend when Clive Peeters was closing some stores (great timing ;)) and then re-opening as Harvey Norman...

We got an easy $500 of our selection.

The sort of sales and the frequency of them are similar to the traditional Boxing day and End of Fin Year sales we are used to - but virtually on a monthly basis now.
 
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