Australia central bank
governor: Rates will not always be this low
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[May 04, 2017]
By Swati Pandey
SYDNEY
(Reuters) - The governor of Australia's central bank warned borrowers on
Thursday that interest rates would not remain at current record lows
forever, as household debt escalates alongside skyrocketing property
prices. Households burdened by heavy mortgage debt have a reduced
appetite for consumption, making the transmission of monetary policy
weaker, Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Philip Lowe told a
lunch in Brisbane.
The central bank is worried about the possibility of future sharp cuts
in household spending if there were to be a deep correction in
Australia's sky-high property prices.
The RBA held official cash rates at a record low 1.50 percent on Tuesday
for the ninth straight month as it balanced the risk of rising household
debt against subdued inflation and wages growth.
But on Thursday Lowe pointed out that households should be prepared for
an increase in interest rates in Australia "at some point."
"This is not a signal about the near-term outlook for interest rates...
but rather a reminder that over time we could expect interest rates to
rise, not least because of global developments," he said.
"We should not expect interest rates always to be this low."
The RBA cut rates in May and August last year to prop up domestic demand
but the risk of stoking indebtedness has forced it to stand pat since,
even though core inflation is stuck below its 2-3 percent target band.
Property prices Sydney and Melbourne - Australia's biggest cities - are
racing at a blistering 16 percent and 15 percent respectively.
At the same time, the ratio of household debt to income has hit all-time
highs while wages grow at the slowest pace on record, making the economy
less resilient to future shocks, Lowe added.
HOUSING SHOCKS
With cash rates at an all-time low and runaway property prices, many
Australians have found it attractive to borrow money to invest in
housing. Speculative investors account for 30-40 percent of new mortgage
loans.
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Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Philip Lowe speaks at a
parliamentary economics committee meeting in Sydney, September 22,
2016. REUTERS/Jason Reed
"Given
the high levels of debt and housing prices, relative to incomes, it is likely
that some households (will) respond to a future shock to income or housing
prices by deciding that they have borrowed too much," said Lowe.
"An otherwise-manageable downturn could be turned into something more serious."
However, Lowe said borrowing was not the underlying cause of higher house
prices, but had instead acted as a "financial amplifier".
Australian regulators announced measures earlier this year to restrain lending
to speculative property investors and to tighten lending standards in an attempt
to cool the sizzling market. There were tentative signs of a cooling off in
April but Lowe made no reference to it.
He noted, however, that Australian banks were soundly capitalized and could
withstand a significant correction in the property market, albeit with some hit
to profitability.
Lowe added that the RBA was "carefully" monitoring the labor market for signs
the A$1.7 trillion economy is picking up.
It expects growth to average around 3 percent or so over the next few years, but
some economists are less cheery.
"We have downgraded our forecasts for consumer spending and lowered our housing
investment forecasts for next year," said Citi Economist Paul Brennan said in a
note.
"It will be harder for the economy to grow above trend and it will become more
reliant on infrastructure spending, non-mining business."
(Reporting by Swati Pandey; Editing by Sam Holmes and Eric Meijer)
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