APRA Finally Moves To Help Slow Sydney And Melbourne Property Markets

 | Apr 03, 2017 10:20

Originally published by AMP Capital h2 Investment markets and key developments over the past week/h2

  • Stronger global economic data dominated the action over the last week, offsetting some of the fears around whether President Trump will be able to pass his pro-business policies through Congress. So while Japanese shares fell 1.8% and Chinese shares lost 1%, US shares rose 0.8%. Eurozone shares gained 1.6% and Australian shares rose 1.9%. Commodity prices mostly rose and the Australian dollar rose slightly. Bond yields mostly fell.
  • The UK has finally lodged its notification to the European Union to formally start up to two years of divorce proceedings. Ho hum! It’s been talked about for so long that markets barely reacted. There will be a long way to go with lots of noise. The European Union will be a tough negotiator as membership of it brings benefits and obligations so there is a high risk of a hard Brexit. Just remember though that the UK is only 2.5% of global GDP and there has been no evidence that the Brexit vote led to a domino effect of other countries looking to exit as well (in fact the three Eurozone elections since Brexit have seen less support for anti-Europe populists). So there is no need for investors to get excited about it.
  • US Congress to remain an ongoing source of noise for investors, but what’s new. While the failure of the Obamacare reforms has led to a quick shift to focussing on tax reform, negotiations amongst House Republicans around a passable health care bill appear to be continuing so it’s not dead in the water. Talk of another government shutdown will also likely start to escalate through April as a new continuing resolution funding spending will need to be passed by April 28th. Ongoing dysfunction in Congress means that a shutdown is possible but as the 2013 experience showed it’s not in either the Republican’s or Democrat’s interest to be seen as the cause. So our base case (70% probability) is that a deal will be worked out when required. And then of course around July to September the debt ceiling will need to be raised again or further suspended which might bring us back to the old “will the US government default?” debate. Again our view is that this will be solved too but it could go down to the wire. All up this is really just more of the same but as long as Trump gets something through at least on tax cuts, share markets should be reasonably happy. Meanwhile, he is continuing to wind back business regulation with the latest being the lifting of a number of restrictions on energy companies and with the Administration signalling mostly modest changes to NAFTA in relation to Mexico, the Mexican peso is up 15% from its January low.
  • APRA’s long awaited additional macro prudential tightening adds to the likelihood that the Sydney and Melbourne property markets will start to slow. The main change from APRA was an expectation that lenders limit interest only loans to 30% of new mortgage lending (from around 40% at present), strict limits on loan to value ratios above 80% for interest only loans along with an expectation that lending to investors remains "comfortably below" the 10% growth limit, that serviceability measures remain "appropriate" and that lending to high risk categories is “constrained”.
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