Higher Investment Property Lending Flows In February Offset Wider Falls

The ABS finalised their finance data today with the overall flows for February 2017. It is not pretty. Overall lending flows, in trend terms, which irons out some of the statistical bumps, shows an overall fall of 1% to $62.2 billion in the month.

Looking in more detail, lending for investment property rose 0.7% to $13 billion, whilst other fixed lending to business fell 2.9% to $20 billion.  So overall productive business lending fell again. Not good for productive growth. Actually the bulk of investor lending was in Sydney and Melbourne, highlighting again the lopsided property market, and why investor lending needs real attention from regulators and Government.

As a result of this, the proportion of fixed business lending for investment housing rose again, to 39.7%, and the share of lending for housing investment rose to 19.4%, the highest it has been since 2015

The total value of owner occupied housing commitments excluding alterations and additions rose 0.2% in trend terms, and the seasonally adjusted series fell 0.5%.

The trend series for the value of total personal finance commitments fell 0.3%. Fixed lending commitments fell 0.6%, while revolving credit commitments rose 0.2%.

The seasonally adjusted series for the value of total personal finance commitments fell 3.8%. Fixed lending commitments fell 4.7% and revolving credit commitments fell 2.2%.

The trend series for the value of total commercial finance commitments fell 1.8%. Revolving credit commitments fell 3.2% and fixed lending commitments fell 1.5%.

The seasonally adjusted series for the value of total commercial finance commitments rose 1.8%. Revolving credit commitments rose 25.5%, while fixed lending commitments fell 2.8%.

The trend series for the value of total lease finance commitments rose 6.4% in February 2017 and the seasonally adjusted series fell 31.5%, after a rise of 73.6% in January 2017.

Finally, here are the movements within the housing sector, with falls in new construction and refinance, offsetting rises in investor lending and purchase of existing dwellings.

Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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