Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Subprime Home Loans: Will Australia have a US style meltdown

The US subprime meltdown occurred in 2006 to 2008, now people are saying that tAustralia is in a position for it to happen here

Many are saying that Australia is headed for a sub prime mortgage crisis similar to that in the US. I don't buy it. I don't believe that there a case for this to happen here. On many levels Australia is much better positioned.

Here's my view on Australia's Sub Prime Lending position

  1. Australia has a better industrial relations and minimum wage support structure. So having people work for peanuts does not happen here like it did in the US. Many of those workers applied for and got sub prime mortgages.

Australia has a booming labour market that is stable

The US does not have anything like our labour market 3 years on. Things have not improved on the unemployment and wage front for two years in the US.
Our home values have trended down for three years, with occasional spikes in some centres reflecting stimulus related demand.

Australian property prices have moderated

Our property prices have trended down to a soft landing and only those that bought at the top of the property market are looking at taking a loss, if they sell.
I agree that homes in Australia may still have some way to fall, but sub-prime lenders have to front with usually 20% deposit or more, so they are going nowhere.
The US experience was different
In the US, property values soared then crashed on the basis of bad loans, not sub prime lending. many people had 120% loans.This is an entirely different situation than an 70% to 80% lend.

Mortgages work differently in Australia

In Australia, we are tied to the loan, but in the US, homeowners can walk away anytime and send the bank jingle mail. They don't suffer the same consequences as they would in Australia. So Australians are less likely to walk away from their loan or their property.

The US Equity Home Loan

The other problem that the US had was that people were using the equity in their homes as an ATM to buy cars and other big ticket items, so they were at the hilt of loan to values, before their home values collapsed.
A few people do this here also but usually to a value of 80% lend, plenty of buffer for a downturn in home values.

Mortgage loans disappeared in the US

The US lost 40% value over night, because mortgage loans went from abundant to scarce overnight.
Many homes in the US lost 75% percent of their values. Most lost 40%. Many because their financial system was broken.
 Only places like San Francisco and New York did not see these numbers in loss of house values.

Credit risks were ignored in the US

The sub prime lenders in the US also lent to people that they knew could never repay the loans.
That has not happened in Australia, and even with low doc home loans, the borrower has a cash flow.
People that are credit impaired can get home loans, but higher deposits and higher rates are the norm.
The Pool of Sub prime lenders in Australia id much smaller than it was in the US
Our sub prime market is also a lot smaller in Australia than it was in the US.
I agree that if we get two more rate rises this year, then we may see less buyers in the market and a lowering of property values.

Our foreclosure rate says we don't have a sub prime lending crisis in Australia

Our foreclosure rate in Australia is tiny compared with the US
In the end we don't have a sub-prime crisis in Australia, because lenders have tightened their lending criteria.

We do have an Housing Affordability Crisis.

We do however have an affordability crisis, and this means that less and less people can afford to buy a home. It also means that less people can get a loan and get into financial difficulties by over paying on property like happened in the US.

Governments in Australia need to bring the cost of land lots down.

So yes, the government have to do something about that, and the root cause in land prices, Lower the cost of land by over $120,000 per block and affordability will return and house prices will soften further.
This means that the RBA can put interest rates up further and it won't hurt like it does now, because the borrowing will be lower.
Author: Rick Adlam Mr Mortgagehttp://www.mrmortgage.com.au