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Home loan market has become stronger and safer: APRA

Nick Bendel avatar
Nick Bendel
- 2 min read
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Australia’s banking regulator has applauded its efforts over the past four years to strengthen the banking system and reinforce sound mortgage lending standards.

APRA has assessed that banks “lifted the quality of their lending standards” between 2014 and 2018, following APRA’s interventions in the mortgage market.

During that time, APRA said, there was a significant reduction in:

  • Investor lending growth
  • The share of interest-only lending
  • Loans with high LVRs (loan-to-value ratios)

APRA chairman Wayne Byres said the regulator had implemented targeted measures to address the key problem – that “strong competitive pressures” were encouraging home loan lenders to lower their standards so they could keep winning new customers.

“APRA’s assessment is that, collectively, its interventions achieved the necessary objective of strengthening lending standards and reducing a build-up of systemic risk in residential mortgage lending,” he said.

No news is good news

Meanwhile, in a separate announcement, APRA said it had decided to hold the countercyclical capital buffer at 0 per cent – where it has been since being introduced in 2016.

This buffer is an additional amount of capital that APRA can require some lenders to hold “to bolster the resilience of the banking sector during periods of heightened systemic risk”.

APRA offered several reasons for leaving the buffer unchanged:

  • APRA has strengthened the banking system over the past four years
  • Banks have continued to strengthen their capital positions
  • There was moderate growth in home loan and business loan lending in 2018
  • There has been a decline in higher-risk categories of new mortgage lending, including interest-only loans, investor loans and high-LVR loans

Disclaimer

This article is over two years old, last updated on January 30, 2019. While RateCity makes best efforts to update every important article regularly, the information in this piece may not be as relevant as it once was. Alternatively, please consider checking recent home loans articles.

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This article was reviewed by Personal Finance Editor Mark Bristow before it was published as part of RateCity's Fact Check process.

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