The US markets fell on Thursday, and the local market is following, with Financial Stocks under pressure. Here is the view at 1:00 PM. Macquarie is 3.36% lower, AMP down 4.2%, Mortgage Choice down 1.62% and Westpac down 1.89%. These moves are taking the financial sector firmly into negative territory.
The Financials index is down 1.81% at the moment, having started the day in positive territory.
Here is our summary of the US market action, recorded earlier today.
We have updated our home price scenarios using the latest available data, and discussed them during our live event which was streamed on Tuesday evening.
Most probable case is a peak to trough fall of between 20 and 30%, but risks continue to accumulate on the downside. We do not think recent “unnatural acts” from RBA and APRA will have much effect, given the legal obligations which currently exist relating to responsible lending (which were clearly not respected in recent years as the Royal Commission highlighted).
This version has been trimmed and does not include the pre-show or live show chat.
The alternative version, as streamed on the night is still available, complete with the chat room comments (some of which people may find concerning).
See our show where John and I pose the question, will the central banks simply try to print their way out of a crisis as they did a decade ago, and what the potential consequences may be. This puts Harry’s views into a broader context.
Welcome to the Property Imperative weekly to 24th November 2018, our digest of the latest finance and property news with a distinctively Australian flavour.
More volatility on the markets this week, more home prices falls, and more revelations from the Royal Commission which put the spotlight on poor culture in the banks and regulators. It’s time to be very cautious in my view.
So let’s get started. Watch the video, listen to the podcast or read the transcript. Caveat Emptor! Note: this is NOT financial or property advice!!
Property listings are skyrocketing according to CoreLogic, with an 11.6% rise in total listings over the last year nationally, but with a 17.4% rise in Sydney and a massive 19.3% rise in Melbourne. New listings are down, so property is sitting on the market for longer and longer, and vendor discounts are rising. Darwin units are seeing discounts of 14.64% and Perth units 10.5%. All signs of a stalling property market.
Sydney has been one of the strongest markets for value growth over recent years however, a big spike in listings and tighter credit conditions has made selling much more difficult. At one point in mid-2015 more than three quarters of properties sold for more than the original list price. Fast forward to the current market and 83.3% of properties are selling for less than the original list price compared to 13.3% selling above the list price. Sydney vendors are now discounting their asking prices by 7.3% on average in order to make a sale, compared with only 5.4% a year ago.
Melbourne is currently seeing 76.3% of properties selling below the original list price which is the highest share in at least 12 years. As recently as April last year, when values were rising at a double-digit annual rate, 34.4% of properties were selling for less than the original list price. By comparison today, only 18.7% of properties have sold over the past three months for more than the original list price and vendors are, on average, discounting their prices by 6.1% to make a sale.
And CoreLogic’s latest home price update revealed their 5-city daily dwelling price index, which covers the five major capital city markets, declined another 0.27% last week, which is the biggest weekly decline of the past year. Prices fell across all the major markets, with Melbourne leading the way down, as expected, with a drop of 0.38%, Sydney down 0.31%, Perth down 0.29%, Adelaide down 0.04% and Brisbane down 0.01%. The falls in Sydney Melbourne and Perth this month are mounting, with Sydney down 0.91%, Melbourne 0.59% and Perth 0.63%.
Remember that Perth has been in the doldrums for years, and while many “property expects” claimed there were signs of a recovery in the West, this is just not true. Through Sydney and Melbourne prices are up compared with a couple of years back, the falls are likely to continue. The declines from the last peak are down 9% in Sydney, 5.4% in Melbourne and 14.7% in Perth.
ANZ said this week “The fall in Sydney housing prices is already the largest in many years. Prices are now 9% below the June 2017 peak, a larger correction than in 2010-11, 2008, 2004-05, 1994-95 and, by the end of this month, the fall will be larger than the 9% fall in 1988–91”. They now think housing prices in Sydney and Melbourne will fall around 15–20% from peak to trough. They link the falls to tighter credit availability, plus additional risks from changes to negative gearing and higher mortgage rates.
And the combined capital city final auction clearance rate saw further weakening last week, with 42 per cent of homes successful at auction; the lowest weighted average result seen since June 2012. The lower clearance rate was across a higher volume of auctions week-on-week with 2,745 capital city homes taken to market, increasing on the 2,386 held the week prior. Both volumes and clearance rates continue to trend lower each week this year relative to the same week’s last year.
Melbourne’s final clearance rate was recorded at 41.3 per cent last week, making it the weakest result the city has seen since June 2012. There were 1,401 homes taken to auction across Melbourne last week, increasing on the week prior when 1,127 auctions were held. One year ago, a much higher 1,732 auctions were held with 66.9 per cent selling.
Sydney’s final auction clearance rate was recorded at 42.8 per cent across 875 auctions last week, increasing slightly from 42.1 per cent across a lower 844 auctions over the previous week. Over the same week last year, 1,061 Sydney homes went to auction and a clearance rate of 54.8 per cent was recorded.
Across the smaller auction markets, Adelaide returned the highest clearance rate of 59 per cent, while Perth saw only 28 per cent of homes successful at auction
The combined capital cities are expected to see a slightly lower volume of auctions this week with CoreLogic currently tracking 2,571 auctions, down from the 2,745 auctions held last week.
Melbourne is the busiest city for auctions again this week, with 1,069 auctions being tracked so far. This week’s volumes are down from the 1,401 auctions held last week and significantly lower than the 1,736 Melbourne homes taken to auction this week one year ago.
Sydney has over 1,000 homes scheduled for auction this week. This is not only an increase on last week’s 875 auctions, but the highest number of auctions the city has seen since March this year. Last year there were a higher 1,215 auctions held across the city over the same week.
Adelaide and Canberra are both expecting a higher volume of auctions week-on-week, while the remaining auction markets have fewer scheduled auctions this week.
S&P Ratings said falling property prices triggered by tightened lending conditions are dominating Australian media headlines. The Australian residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) sector so far has been relatively resilient to pressure, with mortgage arrears remaining low and ratings performance stable. The RMBS sector is now facing more elevated risk than it was 12 months ago. Alongside high household debt and low wage growth are emerging risks such as lower seasoning levels in new transactions and increasing competition.
Meantime, looking in the rear-view mirror, Fitch Ratings said that their RMBS index 30+ days’ arrears fell by 4bp quarter on quarter to 1.04% during 3Q18. Fitch Ratings has observed a drop in third-quarter arrears for the previous decade. They say national dwelling prices continued to decline in 3Q18, led by falls in Melbourne, which dropped by 2.33% from the previous quarter, and Sydney, down by 2.11%. The price falls followed tighter lending standards, which restricted new loans and made refinancing more difficult, reducing demand in Australia’s property market. The peak-to-trough decline in Sydney is now 8.2%, which is the second-largest fall in the past 35 years. The largest fall was seen during the last recession in the early 1990s when prices fell by 9.2%.
RMBS transactions rated by Fitch continued to experience extremely low levels of realised losses and a rising lenders’ mortgage insurance (LMI) payment ratio since 4Q12. Excess spread was sufficient to cover principal shortfalls on all transactions during 3Q18.
This is starting to hit the broader economy now, as expected. Home price falls often lead broader economic falls by 12-18 months.
ANZ said momentum slowed further in the September quarter across most of Australia. All states and territories except Tasmania and the Northern Territory decelerated and recorded growth at below their trend rates. The loss of momentum demonstrated by the Stateometer is consistent with their forecast that the Australian economy will grow at a year-ended pace of 2.9% by the June quarter 2019, down from 3.4% in June this year. The slowing, brings into doubt the 3.25% year-ended growth rate forecast by the Reserve Bank for June 2019. Every state, except Tasmania, experienced a drag to momentum from the housing component of the index in the September quarter. The labour market also became less positive for all states and territories except Victoria and the Northern Territory. Trade was a highlight with the mining states of Western Australia and Queensland recording stronger positive contributions as resource prices, export volumes and the AUD/USD exchange rate moved in their favour. In New South Wales and Victoria, which are less commodity intensive but have large service sectors, trade momentum also picked up, suggesting a further boost to tourism and education exports. They concluded that tightening of credit market conditions remains a negative factor that together with a poorer outlook for house prices is pulling back demand in this important sector, especially in New South Wales and Victoria.
And the six-month annualised growth rate in the Westpac–Melbourne Institute Leading Index, which indicates the likely pace of economic activity relative to trend three to nine months into the future, fell from 0.41% in September to +0.08% in October. With this latest slowdown, the Index growth rate continues to point to slowing momentum into the new year. Over the seven months from October last year to April this year the growth rate averaged 0.89%. In the six months since April the growth rate has averaged only 0.19% – a clear step down.
So to the Royal Commission. In Sydney this week, with most time spent on CBA (CEO and Chairperson) and ASIC (Chairperson). A few key areas came into focus including Broker remuneration, where CBA advocated a fix fee model, Front line staff and senior executive remuneration; how the boards looked at risk related issues (often seemingly myopically); the question of vertical integration – especially relating to the question of advice versus sales in wealth management, and oversight and enforcement by regulators.
The core issue was the question of misaligned incentives, which has led to the misconduct thrown into sharp relief in the inquiry. As a result, we would expect to see reform in the areas of broker commissions, front line remuneration, and vertical integration. All significant, and likely to crimp bank performance further.
On brokers, CBA estimated that the average remuneration for a broker writing an average loan would fall from $6,627 to just $2,310. And that CBA would save $197m on a cumulative basis over 5 years. So some would say they are talking their own book! At very least we expect trail commissions to go, and a best interest obligation introduced.
ASIC rightly copped flack, and as a result, we would expect them to be more proactive, demanding larger penalties, perhaps naming and shaming, and more litigation through the courts. Frankly ASIC was too close to the big banks, and has not met its regulatory obligations, and insufficient funding is not a valid excuse. The inquiry also questioned why ASIC needs to discuss the terms of “infringement notices” with banks before they are finalised. “The parking inspector doesn’t seek an indication from the person he’s giving a parking fine to as to whether they will accept and pay it. He just does it. Why don’t you just do that?” Ms Orr asked. “My understanding from the team is that if there is an unwillingness to accept an infringement notice we would just go straight to court,” Mr Shipton said rather weakly.
We will see more next week, when the Melbourne Banks and APRA are up.
As the AFR put it “Kenneth Hayne looks like reshaping the governance of Australia’s leading public companies judging from the line of questioning directed at Commonwealth Bank of Australia chairman Catherine Livingstone and chief executive Matt Comyn. Based on the lines of inquiry pursued by counsel assisting, Rowena Orr, QC, the Hayne governance era looks something like this: verbatim records of conversations held by board and sub-committee members, longer board meetings, more extensive board room information packs, intensive director induction programs, more robust challenging of management, and increased employment of lawyers and accountants as non-executive directors. This would go hand-in-hand with the increased rules and regulations such as those already pushed through parliament covering bank remuneration. The new laws have given greater intervention powers to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, both of which will need significantly expanded budgets.
There was nothing here that suggested the lending tightening we have seen will be reversed, which then puts the acid back on the RBA, APRA and Treasury. As we discussed this week, Governor Lowe went public at CEDA with his concern that banks were becoming too risk adverse. See our post “The People’s Gold Will Not Be Kept Among the People”, which also covered the Governors comments on Australia’s gold. All the more reason for effective banking separation in my book!
But the more immediate point is the fact that home prices are tightly locked to accelerating rates of credit growth, – we call this the credit impulse. Even a slowing of the rate of credit growth is more than sufficient to lower home prices, precisely as we see now – so a fall to 5.2% or thereabouts as reported by the RBA is sufficient to drive prices lower. Most Central Bankers just do not understand this critical linkage, preferring to believe that as credit creates assets, increasing debt is a zero sum game – this is just plain wrong!
We updated our scenarios, and you can watch the replay of our recent live stream where we discussed our thinking – the probability of more significant home price falls is rising. Even in the smaller markets. Have no doubt this will have a significant impact on the broader economy. GDP will fall.
Locally, the markets, were all over the place this week, in volatile trading. The S&P ASX 100 rose 0.51% to 4,711, still reflecting recent lows on Friday. The ASX VIX eased a little on Friday down 2.41%, but at 16.55 is still in “fear” territory. The banks did better on Friday, with the S&P ASX 200 Financials up 1.08% to 5,731. AMP was up 1.65% to 2.46, still near the bottom, ANZ was up 2.29% to 26.34, Bank of Queensland was up 0.62% to 9.79, Bendigo was up 1.17% to 10.40, CBA rose 0.95% on Friday, to 71.30, NAB was up 1.03% to 24.48, Suncorp was up 0.67% to 13.49, Westpac was up 1.4% to 26.04, Mortgage Insurer Genworth was up 0.91% to 2.21 and continues in the doldrums. Macquarie Group was up 0.29% to 114.53.
The Australian Dollar US Dollar slid 0.25% to 72.36, still in its trading range, while the bitcoin Aussie fell 10.38% to 5,297 and the Aussie Spot Gold rate fell 0.11% to 1,691.
Stocks on Wall Street ended lower as another tumble in oil prices weighed on energy stocks. The Dow fell 0.73% ending at 24,286, while the broader S&P 500 index lost 0.66% to 2,632. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite was down 0.48% to 6,939. The volatility index rose 2.74% to 21.37 as the gyrations continue. Trading was light after the Thanksgiving break. The S&P 100 was down 0.84% to 1,161.
The S&P 500 Financials was down 0.91% to 430.5 signalling more weakness in the financial sector, while Goldman Sachs fell 1.86% to 189.02.
Crude oil prices fell more than 7.7% as concerns persisted about a supply glut, down to 50.42. Dow components Exxon Mobil fell 2.7% and Chevron slumped 3.3%.
Helping the sinking sentiment, of course, was the notion that President Donald Trump would successfully prevent OPEC from slashing production when the cartel meets in Vienna on Dec. 6, by using his “no-sanctions trump card” for Saudi Arabia, which has admitted a premeditated murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, but denies any involvement by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
The energy sector has lost 16.5% since the beginning of October, making it the worst performing S&P sector during the period and putting it on pace for its biggest two-month drop since September 2011.
“If we get clarity on any of these – oil prices, trade war with China and the Federal Reserve’s rate of monetary policy tightening – we could go a long way towards making investors comfortable in investing in the market,” one analyst said.
Meanwhile, retail stocks were in focus with Black Friday sales underway. Discounts will continue through to Cyber Monday as investors will look to see if the companies can overcome an underwhelming retail earnings season. Walmart was up more than 1%, but Amazon.com dropped 0.96% to 1,502. Apple fell 2.54% to 172.20 and Intel fell 1.04% to 46.54. Google was also down 1.28% to 1.030.
Cryptocurrency prices slumped on Friday, with Bitcoin falling to a new 14-month low down 6.59% to $4,342, The digital currency is down more than 75% from its peak of $20,000 in 2017. Meanwhile, UK regulators warned investors against digital coin derivatives earlier this week. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) could ban some crypto-based derivatives, Christopher Woolard, executive director of strategy and competition at the FCA, said at a crypto event in London. “We’re concerned that retail consumers are being sold complex, volatile and often leveraged derivatives products based on exchange tokens … Given this, the FCA will also consult on a prohibition of the sale to retail consumers of derivatives referencing certain types of cryptoassets (for example, exchange tokens), including contracts-for-difference, options, futures and transferable securities,” Woolard warned.
The US Dollar index was up 0.26% to 96.96. The Euro USD was down 0.61% to 1.13 and the British Pound US Dollar was down 0.47% to 1.28, on more Brexit weakness. Deutsche Bank was down 0.84% to 8.18. Gold was down 0.37% to 1,223.
All this may slow the FED’s drove towards higher rates, with the 3-month rate down 0.02% to 2.41% and the 10-Year rate down 0.48% to 3.05. That said, I expect another couple of hikes, which will put the cat among the pigeons in terms of corporate debt, and funding costs more generally.
We believe there will be further market volatility in the run up to Christmas, and more home price falls locally. Thus we cannot think of any good reason why you would consider buying property in the current climate – best to ignore the spruikers, and so call great mortgage offers, and bide your time. Those with a current mortgage should check to see if better refinanced rates are available, but that will depend on your risk profile. But for some, there are savings to be made (though the Banks may like to hope you are not smart enough to find them!).
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Welcome to the Property Imperative weekly to 10th November 2018, our digest of the latest finance and property news with a distinctively Australian flavour.
Loads more data this week, all pointing to the impact that tighter credit conditions are having on the economy – that is unless you are the RBA, which seems to see everything as just fine and missing the debt bomb elephant in the room.
Watch the video, listen to the podcast or read the transcript.
And by the way you value the content we produce please do consider joining our Patreon programme, where you can support our ability to continue to make great content.
We start with the latest lending stats from the ABS. Further evidence of the lending slow down came through in spades in their housing finance statistics to September 2018. Looking at the trend flows first, new lending for owner occupation fell 1.7% compared with last month, to $13.78 billion. Investment lending flows fell 0.8%, to $8.96 billion, and owner occupied refinanced loans were flat at $6.24 billion. Refinanced loans as a proportion of all flows rose to 20.8% and we continue to see this sector of the market the main battleground for lenders who are trying to attract lower risk existing borrowers with keen rates. Investment loans, were 39.4% of all new loans, up again from last month as owner occupied lending demand eases.
Looking at all the categories of loans month on month, we see lending for owner occupied construction down 1.2%, lending for the purchase of new dwellings down 2.2%, lending for the purchase of other existing dwellings down 1.7%, while investment lending for the construction of new property fell 2.5%, investment property for individuals fell 0.6% and investment lending for other entities, such as self-managed super funds, dropped 2.2%. As a result, total flows were down 1.1% compared with last month.
First time buyers were also down in number in September, falling by 8.8% to 8,693 new loans. This was 18% of all loans, up from 17.8% last month. As we highlighted in our recent post “Mortgage Lending Enters the Danger Zone”, household debt is still rising, home prices are falling creating a negative wealth effect, and this will drive prices lower still.
Yet according to the RBA’s latest statement on Monetary policy, all is well, as they continue to paint a picture of underlying momentum in the economy based on jobs growth, low unemployment, and a prospect of wages growth, but still down the track. “GDP growth is running above 3 per cent. The unemployment rate has declined noticeably, reaching 5 per cent in the month of September. GDP growth is now expected to be around 3½ per cent on average over 2018 and 2019, but to ease in the latter part of the forecast period as production of some resource commodities stabilises at high levels”. They of course left the cash rate unchanged on Tuesday.
They are now forecasting an unemployment rate down to 4¾ per cent by the end of 2020. That would normally be a catalyst for wage rises, but we are not so sure that logic works any more given the international evidence, and the different employment structures (e.g. gig economy, part-time work, zero hours’ contracts etc.).
GDP was helped by strong terms of trade thanks to higher commodity prices. “Global energy demand has supported oil, liquefied natural gas (LNG) and thermal coal prices, while ongoing strong demand for steel in China and, increasingly, India, has supported the prices of iron ore and coking coal; supply disruptions have also boosted coking coal prices in recent quarters. But later they warn of a potential slow down.
They argue that the housing slowing down, which is apparent in most areas across the country is inconsequential, and the housing debt burden (high by any standards), is manageable. But we note the debt ratio is as high as ever it’s been, the household savings ratio is falling, and household wealth is declining thanks to falling prices now. This could well crimp consumption down the track. And that has supported GDP growth for years.
So overall, they say the positives outweigh the negatives, and the next few quarters are looking fine, but we believe there are a number of clouds on the horizon. These include further interest rate rises in the USA, flowing through to higher funding costs in Australia for many mortgage holders, the risks from China slowing, and possibility that wages growth will remain stuck in neutral. High household debt remains a significant burden. Yet they cannot see the elephant!
So whilst the RBA still suggest the cash rate may rise higher later, we think there is a significant chance they will have to cut further, to levels never seen before. Our read is there are significant risks in their outlook, and they are mostly on the downside. But then the RBA does have a habit of wearing rose-tinted glasses.
In fact, there is panic in the air as tightening credit spills over into falling home prices and potentially impacts the broader economy. Indeed, the AFR reported today that Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has urged banks to ease their lending clampdown for the public good as the government seeks to head off a royal commission-inspired credit crunch just as the housing market hits the skids. He expressed concern that lending across the board – for homebuyers, small business and borrowers – could tighten further after Commissioner Kenneth Hayne releases his final report by February 1.
The early reappointment of Australian Prudential Regulation Authority chairman Wayne Byres sends a message that is both poorly timed and off-key, given the important questions that have been raised by the royal commission. See out post “Shock Announcement Collapses Confidence And Trust In Australia’s Financial System”. Commissioner Ken Hayne’s interim report was so incendiary that it’s easy to forget it only covered the first two-thirds of the commission’s hearings.
The Reserve Bank of Australia and Treasury have also privately cautioned the Morrison government that any regulatory response to the financial services Royal Commission must be careful to avoid putting the brakes on lending to home buyers and business.
This is remarkable given the high debt ratios and mortgage stress, and is one of the “un-natural acts” we have been warning about. Let’s be clear, the Royal Commission has shone a light on poor practice, but APRA had already been applying belated pressure on the banks for loose lending, especially to investors and we have been in a long-term forced upswing thanks to poor Government policy, and weak supervision. This is now being pulled back, finally, but to BLAME the Royal Commission for this outcome is nonsense. It’s the same category as the exaggerated claims that Labor’s negative gearing reforms would hit existing investment property holders. It is just not true.
I discussed the underlying trends in the housing sector and why this is not just a bubble, but a structural crisis, in an interview I did with Alex Saunders from Nugget’s News. We explored the question of whether housing is in a bubble, micro-markets, and the expectations for the future trajectory of home prices given tighter lending conditions. And where might block chain fit in? You can watch the programme on YouTube.
I also discussed the latest results from our Mortgage Stress surveys. Having crossed the 1 million Rubicon last month, across Australia, more than 1,008,000 households are estimated to be now in mortgage stress (last month 1,003,000). This equates to 30.7% of owner occupied borrowing households. In addition, more than 22,000 of these are in severe stress. We estimate that more than 61,000 households risk 30-day default in the next 12 months. We continue to see the impact of flat wages growth, rising living costs and higher real mortgage rates. Bank losses are likely to rise a little ahead. We discussed these results in our post “October Mortgage Stress Update”.
It’s also worth noting that the ABS data this week on costs of living showed that many households seeing their costs rise way faster than the official CPI data. Most households would not be at all surprised.
We now know that the Royal Commission will be interrogating the major banks and the regulators in the final series of hearings, and there are some hard questions to be asked, about poor culture, behaviour standards and practice. Yet we noted that the 300 or so documents released this week from a range of players, are following “party lines”. The major banks are arguing in their submissions that no significant changes to structure or regulation are required, some of the smaller players argue they are at a competitive disadvantage thanks to the current industry structure and regulation and the mortgage broker sector argues that no significant changes are required to remuneration and conflict of interest rules. On the other hand, consumer groups stress the current issues of poor selling, advice and supervision.
And the submissions from the industry also lay bare more of the criminal activity, fraud, and worse, which has beset the sector. We still believe significant change is required, and you can watch our segment on this “Our Royal Commission Submission”. The regulators need a shake-up as well. So the question is, will the Royal Commissioner stand firm, or wilt under the pressure from so many stakeholders. I hope he can see the elephant in the room!
And talking of regulators, APRA released a paper this week on Loss-Absorbing Capacity of ADI’s. It shows that currently major Australian banks are at the lower end of Total Capital compared with international peers. As a result of proposed changes, major banks (Domestic systemically important banks in Australia, D-SIBs) will see their funding costs rise – incrementally over four years – by up to five basis points based on current pricing. This is intended to build in more financial resilience by lifting the capital requirements, centred on tier 2. Other banks may also be impacted to an extent.
If the D-SIBs were to maintain an additional four to five percentage points of Total Capital they would have ratios more in line with their international peers. But not in the top 25%, and the banks overseas are also lifting capital higher… so some tail chasing here! Is this “unquestionably strong”? “The aim of these proposals and resolution planning more broadly is to ensure that the failure of a financial institutions can be resolved in an orderly fashion, which protects the interests of beneficiaries and minimises disruption to the financial system,” APRA Chairman Mr Byres said. Written submissions are open to 8 February 2019.
The Bank reporting season revealed weaker profits, pressure on net interest margins, a rise in 90+ mortgage delinquencies, and more provisions for customer remediation. Yet, the banks managed to tweak their provisions to maintain capital levels. The earnings of Australia’s four major banks are likely to fall further in the near term due to slowing credit growth, especially in the residential mortgage segment, and further remediation and compliance costs associated with inquiries into the financial sector, including the Royal Commission, says Fitch Ratings. They said “Slower growth puts pressure on the banks to increase lending margins to maintain profitability. However, intense regulatory and public scrutiny of the sector, as well as strong competition, may make it difficult for the banks to reprice loans and pass on the recent increase in wholesale funding costs, as evidenced from the latest financial results. Net interest margins are therefore unlikely to improve in the short term”.
Jonathon Mott from UBS, one analyst I rate very highly, said: (1) ‘Underlying’ revenue fell -1.3% (h/h); (2) NIM was down 7bp to 199bp; (3) Average Interest Earning assets grew just 1.4% as the banks further tightened underwriting and continued to run off low yielding institutional assets; (4) Fee income and markets revenue were weaker; (5) ‘Underlying’ costs rose 1.9% (h/h) given ongoing investment, compliance and regulatory spend, which more than offset productivity savings; (6) This left ‘Underlying’ Pre-Provision Profits down 3.6% (h/h); (7) Credit impairment charges fell to just 11bp – the lowest ever recorded.
Oh and NAB this week finally moved to protect their Net Interest Margin, saying it would be changing the special offer on its base variable rate, available for new owner occupier principal and interest customers, from 3.69 per cent to 3.87 per cent. The change, which comes into effect from this Friday, November 9, reduces the discount on the advertised rate from 48 basis points to 30 basis points. It will only affect new customers taking out the product. The announcement comes nearly two months after the fourth-largest lender said it would not join the rest of the Big Four in raising mortgage rates in a bid to “rebuild trust” with customers.
So to property. Home prices are still falling according to the CoreLogic index, with year to date declines on average of 6.12% in Sydney, 4.79% in Melbourne and 3.5% in Perth. Brisbane is up 0.04% and Adelaide up 1.7% making a 5 capital average fall of 5%. In fact, the rate of decline appears to be accelerating.
Macquarie has joined the bearish view of home prices, saying they now expect national dwelling prices to fall for at least another 12 months, with a peak-to-trough correction of around 10 per cent. They expect prices in Sydney and Melbourne to fall by 15-20 per cent. They suggest it is a housing correction rather than being the result of a macro correction, in that falls have so far been orderly, with little evidence of distressed selling, even among investors affected by changes in prudential policy and lending standards. A disorderly housing price correction is unlikely, absent a major global economic downturn. They see declines, even a 20 per cent peak-to-trough decline would merely take prices back to April/May 2015 levels. They see no evidence of a severe credit curtailment, which is interesting. We do not agree.
The number of properties coming on the market continues to skyrocket, as more are forced to sell, or are confronted with the fear of not getting out, as the Sydney listings shows from Domain. There are more than 27,000 listed which seems to be some sort of record, our property Insider Edwin Almeida is tracking the results.
CoreLogic says the weighted average clearance rate saw further softening last week, with only 42.7 per cent of homes successful at auction. There were 1,541 auctions held across the combined capital cities, having decreased from the 2,928 auctions held over the week prior when a higher 47 per cent cleared. Both volumes and clearance rates continue to track lower each week when compared to the same period last year (2,046 auctions, 61.5 per cent).
In Melbourne, final results saw the clearance rate fall last week, with 45.7 per cent of the 266 auctions successful, down from the 48.6 per cent across a significantly higher 1,709 auctions over the week prior.
Across Sydney, the final auction clearance rate came in at 42.6 per cent across a slightly higher volume of auctions week-on-week, with 813 held, up from 798 the previous week when 45.3 per cent cleared. Sydney’s final clearance rate last week was not only the lowest seen this year, but the lowest the city has seen since December 2008.
The only capital city to see more than 50 per cent of auctions successful last week was Adelaide (50.8 per cent), however this was lower than the prior week’s 57.6 per cent. Brisbane saw the lowest clearance rate, with only 30 per cent of homes selling.
Geelong recorded the highest clearance rate of all the non-capital city regions, with 57.1 per cent of auctions reporting as successful, while the Sunshine Coast region had the highest volume of auctions (55).
This week, the number of auctions scheduled to take place across the combined capital cities is expected to rise, with 2,276 currently being tracked by CoreLogic, increasing from the 1,541 auctions held last week, although lower than results from one year ago (2,907). Across Melbourne, auction activity is expected to rise considerably after the slowdown seen preceding the Melbourne Cup festivities last week, with the city set to host 1,074 auctions this week, up from the 266 auctions held last week. In Sydney, 817 homes are scheduled to go to auction this week, increasing slightly from the 813 auctions held last week. Across the smaller auction markets, the number of homes scheduled for auction this week is lower than last week across all cities.
So to the markets, where the ASX 100 fell 0.09% on Friday to 4,874, whilst the ASX 200 Financials rose 0.23% to end at 5,911 and the local fear index rose 1.45% to 14.09.
AMP bumped along the bottom at 2.67, up 2.30 on Friday, ANZ moved up to 27.13, or 0.3%, the Bank of Queensland rose 0.61% to end at 9.92, while Bendigo and Adelaide Bank rose 0.57% to 10.55. CBA rose 0.47% on Friday to 70.95 while Mortgage Insurer Genworth was up 2.2% to 2.32. Macquarie recovered to 123.64 up 0.45%. National Australia Bank slid 0.12% to end the week at 24.90, Suncorp was up 0.64% to 14.08, and Westpac was up 0.07% to 27.70.
The Aussie, which reacted positively to the US mid-terms, ended the week at 72.25, but was down 0.44% on Friday. The Aussie Bitcoin rate was 8,566, down 0.54% and the Aussie Spot Gold fell 0.71% to 1,674.
Across to the US markets. U.S. stocks were lower after the close on Friday, as losses in the Technology, Basic Materials and Industrials sectors led shares lower. At the close in NYSE, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.77%, while the S&P 500 index fell 0.92% to 2,781, and the NASDAQ Composite index fell 1.65% to 7,407. The CBOE Volatility Index, which measures the implied volatility of S&P 500 options, was up 3.83% to 17.36. Gold Futures for December delivery was down 1.30% or 15.90 to $1210.30 a troy ounce. Elsewhere in commodities trading, Crude oil for delivery in December fell 1.37% or 0.83 to hit $59.84 a barrel. The US has just become the largest oil producer. Generally, a 20% drop from high close to low close defines a bear market. We are entering that territory!
Banks were off, with the S&P500 Financials down 0.93% to 449.49. On the whole, consumer discretionary stocks are slightly outpacing the S&P 500 since early October. The outlier might be Apple, which is actually a tech stock but obviously can have a huge impact on shopping season. The stock has made it back a bit after falling below $200 a share last week, but remains a long way from recent highs of around $230 as investors continue to debate what the company’s holiday quarter guidance and decision to stop reporting iPhone unit sales might mean moving forward. It ended at 204.5, though down 1.93 on the day.
A weakening Chinese economy helped affirm the bearish narrative of slower global growth. The FED kept the cash rate on hold, but the narrative confirms the view that further hikes are likely, with the 3-month bond rate flat at 2.36, and the 10-year rate back a little off its highs, down 1.44% to 3.19. The Fed said it expects “further, gradual increases” in rates as the economy continues to thrive. It’s a bit hard to understand any panic about these words, because they didn’t tell investors anything that most didn’t already know.
The European Commission tangled with Italy over the Italian government’s budget forecasts, which the EC said looked too optimistic on deficits. Moving west, debate raged about whether a Brexit deal might be getting close, and the U.K. government is holding meetings on the issue this weekend, media reports said. A Brexit breakthrough, if it comes, might give European markets a boost. But it’s unclear how close it might be. Deutsche Bank was down 1.75% on Friday to 8.97, and we are watching this as a bellwether for more trouble ahead.
Bitcoin was down 1.45% to 6,415.
So to conclude, the big debt question still remains the elephant in the room, and many are choosing to look past it, though as interest rates continue to push higher in the US, this will be harder to do. Locally, we expect more unnatural acts to try and keep the credit balloon in the air, but we believe that tighter standards are set to lurk in the shadows, meaning that the stage is set for more home price falls ahead.
Finally, a quick reminder, our next live Q&A session is now scheduled for November 20th at 8 pm Sydney time. You can schedule a reminder by using the YouTube Link and join in the live discussion, or send in questions beforehand. If previous sessions are any guide, it should be a lively event!
In another in our series talking with those in the front line of finance and property, I caught up again with Tony Locantro from Alto Capital in Perth.
We discussed the property market and broader investment strategies. What to do?
Welcome to the Property Imperative weekly to 3rd November 2018, our digest of the latest finance and property news with a distinctively Australian flavour.
Watch the video, listen to the podcast or read the transcript.
The latest data reinforces the downward momentum in property, and the blowback more broadly across the economy and the finance sector. Those arguing for just a small adjustment, before a spring bounce are sadly plain wrong. In fact, the falls are likely to accelerate from here
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The latest data shows that sales listings are surging in the Sydney region, with 27,265 showing on Domain, and even more if you include hidden listings. And in one day 230 additional new listings were added. This is being driven by more property investors seeking to exit, either because of the extra costs of switching from an interest only mortgage to a principal and interest mortgage, or simply to crystallise gains before they dissipate. This is consistent with our survey data on transaction intentions, which also shows that the number of prospective purchasers is falling. You can watch our post “Decoding Property Buying Intentions – “You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet” where we discuss the results in more detail.
The auction results last week, which were delayed from some sources, but showed lower results, many withdrawn properties, and more properties where the final sale price was not disclosed, all signs of a distressed market.
CoreLogic says there were 2,928 capital city homes taken to auction last week, making it the fifth busiest week for auctions so far this year, but more than half of the homes taken to auction failed to sell giving a final auction clearance rate of 47 per cent; the fifth consecutive week where the combined capital cities have seen less than 50 per cent of homes sold. Last year, there were 3,713 homes taken to auction over the same week, when a much higher 64.5 per cent sold.
Melbourne’s final auction clearance rate came in higher week-on-week. The improved clearance rate last week was across the second highest volume of auctions seen across the city this year. There were 1,709 auctions held, returning a clearance rate of 48.6 per cent, having increased on the 45.7 per cent over the week prior when 1,087 auctions were held.
In Sydney, 798 auctions took place last week with 45.3 per cent successful, up from the 44.6 per cent over the week prior when fewer auctions were held (675). Although the clearance rate was higher over the week, it remained much lower than the 58.3 per cent of homes successful at auction over the same week last year when a significantly higher 1,215 auctions took place.
Across the smaller auction markets, Adelaide was the best performing in terms of clearance rate with 57.6 per cent of homes selling at auction last week, although this was lower than the previous week.
This week, there are fewer auctions scheduled to take place across the combined capital cities, with 1,438 currently being tracked by CoreLogic, which is half the volume of auctions recorded last week when the combined capital cities saw 2,928 homes taken to auction.
Across Melbourne, the number of auctions to be held is expected to fall this week, with only 234 Melbourne homes scheduled to go to auction. The lower volumes are likely due to the upcoming Melbourne Cup festivities and coming off the back of the second busiest week for auctions this year (1,709).
Activity across Sydney is set to remain relatively steady week-on-week, with 764 homes scheduled for auction this week, decreasing by 4.3 per cent on last week’s final figures which saw 798 auctions held across the city.
Across the smaller auction markets, activity across Adelaide and Brisbane is virtually unchanged week-on-week, while Canberra, Perth and Tasmania are all expected to see a higher volume of auctions this week.
The most recent price results for October from CoreLogic takes the annual decline across the national index to 3.5%, signalling the weakest macro-housing market conditions since February 2012, with their hedonic home value index reporting a 0.5% fall in dwelling values nationally in October.
On a rolling quarterly basis, dwelling values are now trending lower across both the combined capital city regions (-1.6%) as well as the combined regional areas of Australia (-0.7%).
The weakest conditions continue to be felt across Australia’s two largest cities where investment buyers have been the most concentrated, supply additions have been the highest and where housing affordability is the most stretched. Sydney values are down 7.4% over the past twelve months and Melbourne values are 4.7% lower over the same period. Values also declined in Perth and Darwin however, the downturn in these two cities has been ongoing since mid-2014, with values falling 3.3% and 2.9% respectively over the past twelve months. Although dwelling values are rising on an annual basis across the remaining cities, the pace of growth has eased. Of course the averages do not tell the true story, there are places where prices have fallen more than 22% in the past year, and CoreLogic revised their index a little, but the trends are clearly down. The funniest thing I saw this week were the property spruikers trying to argue the rate of fall was slowing. That is just not really true!
Also it is worth noting that the higher end of the market continues to fall further and faster. The disparity of performance between the upper and lower quartiles is clear at lower geographic aggregations as well. In Melbourne, the top 25% of the market by value has seen values fall by almost 9% over the past twelve months; a slightly weaker performance than Sydney’s upper quartile market where values are down by 8.6%. At the same time, more affordable housing markets have seen a 2.9% rise in values across Melbourne over the past year, while Sydney’s lower quartile has recorded a fall that is almost half that of the upper quartile.
Finally on property, economist John Adams and I debunked Nine’s The Block in our post “Adams/North: “Block Mania” Will Literally Kill Innocent Australians” We looked at why people cannot see the upcoming property correction and we got deep and dirty into philosophy, TV villains, cash for comment and the KGB. What could possibly go wrong? Is reality on the blink?
We had full year results from NAB and ANZ this past week. In NAB’s cash earnings were down 14%. They included restructuring costs of $530m and customer related remediation of $261m, leading to a cash earnings figure before these of $6,493m down 2.2% on FY17. Their net interest fell 4 basis points from 1.88% in 2017 to 1.84% in 2018. This included 2 basis point falls in lending margin, and liquidity/funding plus 2 basis points from markets, offset by clawing back margin from depositors of 2 basis points. NAB was down 0.55% on Friday to 25.21.
ANZ’s Cash Profit on a continuing basis was $6.49 billion, down 5%, or flat on a statutory profit basis. Their approach to simplify the business and reduce costs have bolstered their capital position, but also left them potentially more exposed to a mortgage and construction sector downturn. They included charges of $377 million after tax for refunds to customers and related remediation costs, plus accelerated amortisation expense of $206 million predominantly relating to its International business and a restructuring charge of $104 million, largely relating to the previously announced move of the Australia and Technology Divisions to agile ways of working. Their net interest margin was significantly lower, thanks to the change in business mix, funding and customer remediation charges. Shane Elliot their CEO said he expected mortgage credit growth would probably halve, to 2 to 3 per cent, in the coming years, and that credit growth from investor borrowers has already “ground to a halt”. “I wouldn’t be surprised if the house price correction had further to run …” He also made the point ANZ is still using HEM for some mortgage lending, but that borrowing power has reduced. The average household average on income of $110,000 three years ago could have borrowed $550,000 for a mortgage but “that same family today with exactly the same income – $110,000 – today could probably only borrow about $440,000,”. ANZ was down 1.24% on Friday to 25.53.
Westpac, which reports next week, also advised the market on Friday it had upped its provisions for customer payments by $46 million to $281 million and its exit of infrastructure funds management business Hastings Funds Management, with also have a negative impact. More putting out the trash! It ended at 26.50 on Friday down 0.64%.
They are all being hit by the slowing mortgage sector, one off costs for customer remediation and business restructuring. Selling off businesses may generate additional capital, but it also puts more reliance on the fading property sector. CBA was also down on Friday dropping 0.86% to 68.35. And remember the Royal Commission is still running.
In contrast, Macquarie who reported their 1H19 results this week rose 3.86% on Friday to 122.42. They announced a net profit after tax of $A1,310 million for the half-year ended 30 September 2018 up five per cent on the half-year ended 30 September 2017. The bank continues a strong run, benefiting from its international business portfolio. International income accounted for 67 per cent of the Group’s total income. The Capital Markets business performed strongly. Their Australian mortgage portfolio of $A36.1 billion increased 10 per cent on 31 March 2018, representing approximately two per cent of the Australian mortgage market. Their shares rose on the results, with analysts revising up future earnings, up 3.86% on the day to 122.42.
And we got data from Lenders Mortgage Insurer Genworth. Their 3Q18 earnings today with a statutory net profit after tax (NPAT) of $19.6 million and underlying NPAT of $20.4 million for the third quarter ended 30 September 2018 (3Q18). It is an important bellwether for the mortgage industry, and confirms recent softening. Whilst they have a strong capital position, their net investment returns were also down a little.
They said that the Delinquency Rate increased from 0.50% in 3Q17 to 0.55% in 3Q18. This was driven by two factors. Firstly, there was a decrease in policies in force. The second factor was the increase in delinquency rates year-on-year across all States (in particular Western Australia, New South Wales and to a lesser extent South Australia). In terms of number of delinquencies, Western Australia and New South Wales experienced the largest increase with Queensland and Victoria experiencing a decrease in number of delinquencies. Their shares were up 1.34% on Friday to 2.27, still near to recent lows.
The latest Credit Aggregates from the RBA to September 2018 continues to show an easing of credit growth. Total credit, across all categories rose seasonally adjusted by $14.41 billion or 0.5%, to $2.8 trillion. Within that owner occupied lending rose 0.5% or $5.5 billion to $1.19 trillion while investment lending rose 0.1% or $0.52 billion to $593 billion. Other personal lending was flat, and business lending rose 0.9% to $943 billion, up $8.4 billion.
The 12 month ended data shows how investor lending continues to slow, owner occupied lending growth is easing, and overall lending for housing growth is slowing to 5.2%. This is a problem for the banks in that to maintain profitability as assets grow, they need the rate of growth of housing loans to RISE not slow down. Even at these levels (with some growth) household debt will rise relative to loans, so again it highlights the fundamental problem we have in the system at the moment. Lending in the less regulated Non-bank sector still appears to be growing more strongly than ADI lending.
APRA released their monthly banking statistics for September 2018. This includes the total balances by ADI broken by investor and owner occupied lending. Total lending grew by 0.21% in the month to a total of $1.65 trillion, or 2.5% annualised. Within that lending for owner occupation rose by 0.36% to $1.09 trillion and investor loans fell 0.03% to $557.4 billion. Investment loans now comprise 33.72% or the portfolio. Looking at the individual major players, we see that only NAB grew their investment loan portfolio in the month, among the big four. Macquarie and Bendigo are lifting investor loans the most by value. ANZ dropped their balances the most.
The CPI number was weak, thanks to some one offs, below the RBA target for inflation. And the retail turnover for September was also pretty low, The ABS released their latest statistics today for September 2018. Households remain under pressure judging by the weak results. In trend terms, overall retail turnover grew by 0.2% in the month. Within the segments, Other Retailing rose 0.6%, Cafes, Restaurants and Take Away Food rose 0.5%, Food Retailing 0.2%, Clothing, Footwear and Personal services was flat, while Household Goods fell 0.2% and Department stores fell 0.1%.
Across the states, TAS rose 0.5%, QLD and VIC both rose 0.3%, NSW rose 0.2% along with SA, ACT was flat, WA fell 0.1% and NT fell 0.9%. Online retail turnover contributed 5.6 per cent to total retail turnover in original terms in September 2018, an unchanged result from August 2018. In September 2017 online retail turnover contributed 4.4 per cent to total retail.
The ASX 100 was up 0.13% on Friday to, 4,817, while the ASX Financials 200 was down 0.38% to 5,748. The Aussie recovered a little against the US Dollar during the week, but ended down 0.18% to 71.93. Given the prospect of the RBA cutting rather than lifting rates, we expect it to go lower. Hexavest, a $14.5 billion fund, said Australia’s dollar may drop to a nine-year low of 67 U.S. cents as the central bank is set to become even more dovish and lean more toward cutting interest rates. A number of other major central banks are trying to catch up with the Fed, “if the RBA’s not playing that same game, bad news near term is you get a weaker currency,”.
AMP is till languishing, as they tried to explain the sale of chunks of the business to the market. It ended at 2.69, up 1.89% on Friday. The problem is, the business is impossible to value at the moment, given the Royal Commission, remediation and management changes. Perhaps someone will make a cheeky bid eventually.
The Gold Spot Aussie Dollar was up 0.11% to 1,713 and the Aussie Bitcoin was up 0.34% to 8,758. Market volatility in Australia is still extended, with the local VIX ending the week at 15.86, down 4.44%.
Volatility also continued in overseas markets, with the US VIX still elevated at 19.51, and up 0.88% on Friday.
The US labour data, released on Friday provided another reason to confirm the FED will continue to hike rates, the unemployment rate was steady at 3.7% with 250,000 additional jobs added. And over the year, average hourly earnings have increased by 83 cents, or 3.1 percent.
The benchmark United States 10-Year yield traded around 3.22% while the United States 2-Year climbed to 2.92%, its highest level in a decade. The 3-month rate though slide just a little to 2.33. You can watch our post Interest Rates WILL Rise
Wall Street closed lower Friday as uncertainty on trade dominated direction after President Donald Trump’s upbeat comments on U.S.-China trade relations appeared to contradict earlier comments from his chief economic advisor. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell about 0.43% to 25,271. The S&P 100 fell 0.74% to 1.211, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 1.04% to 7,357. The S&P 500 Financials was flat on Friday having recovered during the week, to stand at 438.
“President Xi and I have agreed to meet at the G20 summit,” Trump told reporters on Friday. Trump added that “a lot of progress” had been made toward reaching a deal that would be “very fair for everybody.”
Trump’s comments seemingly contradicted earlier remarks from White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow, who indicated little progress had been made with China, denying reports that the president had asked his Cabinet to put together a trade deal with the country.
Bloomberg reported earlier Friday that Trump had asked officials to prepare a draft for a U.S.-China trade deal.
Beyond trade, tech stocks wreaked havoc on the broader market, led by a slump in shares of Apple. Apple fell 6.63% after its above-forecast earnings and revenue was overshadowed by soft guidance and weaker-than-expected iPhone shipments in the last quarter, ending at 207.48. The S&P 500 technology sector fell about 2%.
Gold was down on Friday by 0.11% to 1,235, but was higher across the week, reflecting the risk on sentiment across the market. Crude Oil fell 1.3% to 62.87, as the Trump Administration seems to be achieving its tri-fold agenda of punishing Iran while balancing the world’s energy needs and keeping oil prices low. Crude markets posted their largest weekly loss since February.
Bitcoin was down a little, at 6,426, down 0.38%, and is still going sideways. According to Agustín Carstens, the General Manager of Bank of International Settlements (BIS), the organization of more than sixty central banks from around the globe, Digital currencies are not real money, but an asset with an aesthetic importance to cryptographic connoisseurs. Cartens made those remarks on Thursday during the Finance and Global Economics Forum of the Americas in Miami. He presented his “Money and payment systems in the digital age” report with virtual coin part of it, dubbed “Cryptocurrencies: fake money.” “No discussion of money and payments in the digital age would be complete without addressing cryptocurrencies. But are cryptocurrencies money? No. The use of “currencies” is misleading,” Carstens told the attendees.
So all in all, locally the property news continues negative and globally the US rate hikes are set to create further pain across the markets. Blowback City in more ways than one!
The US market fell last night with tech stocks hit very hard, and the negative sentiment haunted our markets today. The NASDAQ fell 4.43% to 7,108, and has now moved more than 10% off its highs – so officially a correction.
The fear index was up to its recent highs again, at 25.23
And the Dow Jones fell 2.41% to 24,583. Actually most of the news was old news, with the expectations of a higher US interest rate and fall out from the Trade wars. But sentiment went negative again.
So no surprise the local market was hard hit in choppy trading today. The banks felt the pain. For example, Bendigo and Adelaide Bank fell 2.57% to 9.85,
Suncorp dropped 1.95% to 13.61
and Bank of Queensland dropped 5.32% to 9.43.
Falls were seen across the sector, with CBA down 1.97% to 65.54.
National Australia Bank down 2.21% to 24.61
ANZ down 2.24% to 24.88
And Westpac down 2.06% to 25.96.
Macquarie, with its international exposure fell 2.84% to 110.46
And the ASX Financials fell 3.02% to 5,534.
The Aussie ended at 70.74 against the US dollar, at the low end of the range and
The ASX 100 ended down 2.82% at 4,661.
The local fear index was up again to recent highs
But AMP was hit hard, thanks to their announcement today of further divestments. Timing is everything! “AMP announced the successful completion of its portfolio review including an agreement to divest its Australian and New Zealand wealth protection and mature businesses (AMP Life) and reinsure New Zealand retail wealth protection for total proceeds of A$3.45 billion”.
Tomorrow will be another day, will prices bounce or fall further?