Lehman Brothers 10 Years On – What Does It Mean To Australia?

I discuss the fallout from the collapse of Lehman Brothers a decade later with Robbie Barwick from the CEC, with a focus on Australia.

Did we dodge the GFC, and what are the implications households and banks here today?

Please consider supporting our work via Patreon ;

Please share this post to help to spread the word about the state of things….

Economics and Markets
Economics and Markets
Lehman Brothers 10 Years On – What Does It Mean To Australia?
Loading
/

The Madness Of Modern Monetary Theory

Economist John Adams and I discuss MMT. Is it really new, and could it work?

The John Adams And Martin North DFA Page

Please consider supporting our work via Patreon

Please share this post to help to spread the word about the state of things….

Economics and Markets
Economics and Markets
The Madness Of Modern Monetary Theory
Loading
/

The Cats Among The Pigeons – The Property Imperative Weekly – 04 August 2018

The latest edition of our weekly finance and property news digest with a distinctively Australian flavour.

Please consider supporting our work via Patreon ;

Please share this post to help to spread the word about the state of things….

Economics and Markets
Economics and Markets
The Cats Among The Pigeons - The Property Imperative Weekly - 04 August 2018
Loading
/

Price Discrimination In the Savings Market

We discuss the UK’s FCA report into the savings market

Please consider supporting our work via Patreon

Link to the FCA report.

Please share this post to help to spread the word about the state of things….

Banking Strategy
Banking Strategy
Price Discrimination In the Savings Market
Loading
/

Mortgage Stress And Defaults – Alternative Scenarios

When we released our mortgage stress report for June 2018, we said that the number of households exposed to risks is rising, and if rates were to increase then around 1 million of households will fall into stress and some may default, up from 970,000 now.


The RBA minutes yesterday focussed in on the problem of household debt.

Members held a detailed discussion of the high level of household debt in Australia, informed by a special paper prepared for this meeting. Household debt has increased by more than household income over the preceding three decades in many countries, but particularly so in Australia. Two key drivers of this trend across countries have been the decline in nominal interest rates, predominantly reflecting lower inflation, and financial deregulation, both of which have increased households’ access to finance. Members noted that a distinguishing feature of the Australian housing market is that the bulk of dwellings are owned by the household sector. This has contributed to greater borrowing for housing by households in Australia compared with other countries, where the corporate sector owns a larger proportion of rental properties. Another feature of the Australian housing market that has contributed to greater borrowing by households is the higher cost of housing in Australia on account of a larger share of the Australian population living in urban centres, typically in large detached dwellings.

Survey data indicate that much of Australian household debt is owed by higher-income and middle-aged people, who tend to have more stable employment and often larger savings buffers. However, members recognised that a material share of household debt is held by lower-income households, which generally have higher debt relative to their income. Household assets in aggregate are valued at around five times the value of household debt and total assets exceed the value of debt for most households. Members noted, however, that most household assets are housing and superannuation, and that both of these are illiquid.

Members noted that high levels of household debt could affect economic outcomes. For example, households with high debt levels are more vulnerable to economic shocks and therefore more likely to reduce consumption in the face of uncertainty about their future income. Members also noted that changes in interest rates have a larger effect on disposable income for households with high debt levels, but that these households may be less inclined to borrow more at times when interest rates fall. Accordingly, members agreed that household balance sheets continued to warrant close and careful monitoring.

In fact our research says, yes, debt is a problem, and it is hitting many different types of household, including more affluent ones.

Our analysis of stress and defaults created a stir in the media, several radio and TV interviews, and some interesting discussions on social media.

One of these, with Peter on Twitter led to a question about how we make our assessment and scenarios and our definitions of mortgage stress (cash-flow based).  We include estimates of expected wages growth, inflation, cpi, interest rates etc.

So this led to a discussion where I volunteered to run a scenario using Peter’s parameters.

We also added in the tax changes and child care subsidy (in both scenarios).  We do not impose a particular family structure, but capture that in our surveys (which aligns to the ABS census distribution).

So, we ran our model with a 3% wage growth, 2.1% CPI and small rise in mortgage rates. Stress levels would begin to fall, but will still be higher than since 2000, because of the greater leverage and debt burden.

Here are the results, one year down the track.

So the impact of potential wages rises, in real terms is significant. A “good outcome!” However even then the risk in the system remains higher than we have been use to.  Defaults reduced by 6% while stress fell by more than 8%.

 

The $1 Trillion “Debt Berg” – What Lies Beneath?

The second in a series of interviews with economist John Adams.

Please consider supporting our Pateron page

The Australian Debt Bomb

John’s Article

Economics and Markets
Economics and Markets
The $1 Trillion "Debt Berg" - What Lies Beneath?
Loading
/

Is A Chinese “Minsky Moment” Looming?

The signs are that the debt bomb is ticking… for China and Australia.

Support our work at the DFA Patreon page.

Economics and Markets
Economics and Markets
Is A Chinese "Minsky Moment" Looming?
Loading
/

Australia’s Debt Bomb

I discuss the state of the Australian economy with economist John Adams.

Links to his series of articles:

Ten signs we’re heading for ‘economic armageddon’ (Feb 2018)

Ten myths making Australians complacent about looming ‘economic armageddon’ (May 2018)

Six pathways to Australia’s ‘economic armageddon’ (June 2018)

How to prepare for economic Armageddon (June 2018)

Australia’s Debt Bomb

I discuss the state of the Australian economy with economist John Adams.

Links to his series of articles:

Ten signs we’re heading for ‘economic armageddon’ (Feb 2018)

Ten myths making Australians complacent about looming ‘economic armageddon’ (May 2018)

Six pathways to Australia’s ‘economic armageddon’ (June 2018)

How to prepare for economic Armageddon (June 2018)

Economics and Markets
Economics and Markets
Australia's Debt Bomb
Loading
/