Monday, December 19, 2011

Australian Mortgages: Happened in 2011?

Australian Mortgages in 2011 from the rear view mirror

The fact that Australian mortgage delinquencies have declined in the third quarter in Australia points to the fact that the worst of mortgage stress may be over.

The return of the saver, and the virtue of saving

This year has seen more Australian households reining in their expenditures, and the biggest fatality of all this is the credit card. Australians seem to be shunning credit card debt like the plague as well as mortgage debt. This year has been credit card debt reduction as the biggest shift to saving has occurred.
That has to be a good thing for everyone, except retailers who have been milking Australians with over priced goods for generations.

The rise and rise of online sales

This year we have seen online sales surge to the point of critical mass, as Australians are starting buy online in a big way, and that has to mean better retail pricing and services in 2012. Even grumpy old Gerry Harvey has capitulated, and has online offers. [Not convinced Gerry, Sorry] If you want to buy superceded stock at new retail prices, shop Harvey Norman is may motto. His ads can shout at me all they like. I have only ever bought duds from Gerry. THat's why I never shop there anymore. But there is a suckerborn every minute, right Gerry?

The 2011 Christmas shopping season

This is one reason I feel that Christmas is going to be challenging for retail. Spending money you are yet to earn is becoming very unwise to savvy Australian shoppers, and those waiting for the Christmas sales to spend their holiday wages are being tempted with ever more attractive pre Christmas sales. And our high dollar means overseas spenders are less likely to come, and have less money to spend if they get here. At the same time cashed up Aussies are flying out and spending on holidays and spending their money overseas. But Australians know that the family home is more important than tinsel and glitter, and so only people with cash in hand seem to be shopping these days.

The banks are a multi-channel money machine

The banks however are doing OK, despite the loss of credit card revenues, and that is due to business loans growing to replace the shrinkage in credit card debt and home mortgage loans applications, which continue to fall away.
So mortgage delinquencies may have fallen, which is good for the banks, but that does not mean that new people want to be roped into 30 years of debt, so we are seeing a fall in housing prices in all capital cities, as interest rates fall and wages rise.

Did Real Estate become a Ponzi Scheme? I think so.

The combination of rising wages, full employment, lowering mortgage rates and falling house prices tells me that Australians have learnt the lesson from the US finance collapse. That Real estate prices can and do get ahead of themselves and must eventually collapse when they grow out of kilter with the wages and supply.
In this respect I feel that real estate price growth has been a massive Ponzi scheme, and that has deflated slowly in Australia, unlike what has occured in the US, the UK and Europe where house prices are down for possibbly a generation.
Suddenly a house is not an investment anymore, it is a way of securing your accommodation for the long haul. Isn't that what a home should be about?
So what will happen to Australia's 1.7 million residential home investors who lose more on their investment every year in the hope of seeing capital gains? Well they are the victims of their own folly. As tax rates have fallen, the attractiveness of these negative gearing schemes was only shored up by one off growth spurt on the early 2000's, and that was on the back of sales pitches historical housing figures that will not be repeated. So all this fluff and puff is behind us.Like all ponzi schemes, the ones holding the baby when the music stops carries the lose, as those out early get to spend their money. What a beautifu swindle! It's not legislation as a crime! So the perpetrators get out scott free.

What's ahead for Mortgages in 2012?

Whats ahead? A flat house market and steady house prices. Maybe a little more price easing. Hopefully a big fall in land prices that is the real problem in home prices.[Ever wonder why the biggest donations to political parties were from Property Developers? Hmmmm.]
Expect to see house price inflation in country areas where the mining boom is happening. Other areas will see falls in house prices I predict. Its already happening in residential land prices in the towns across Australia. If I were buying a home in a country town, I would want a 10 year mortgage with comfortable repayments. Otherwise renting would be my option. A thirty year mortgage only makes sense in the capital cities of Australia today, because are economy and our society is so dynamic, and mobile. You can't shift real estate.

Australia: Experts in Digging Holes and turning dirt into Gold

The great thing about Australia is that most of it is lousy for growing things, but the soil is rich in minerals. So we have become more into digging holes and shipping the dirt off for Gold. Not a bad earner.
What we have also become is the beacon for climate change and hopefully we can transform this into an energy creation earner. More renewal energy means less imports of oil, and less pollution. Can we export energy so produced, or at least the kit to make it happen. I hope so. My Crystal ball is telling me is that energy, clean air, clean water and food will all be at a premium in the years ahead. We should position the Nation for this inevitable future World.

The cost of money will rise in 2012

The banks are trying to warn people, but the Government is pretending not to listen. The Euro crisis, and in particular, the fact that the UK does not want to touch their baby [smart brave move], will mean that France's banks is caught holding that particular baby, so expect to hear the music stop anytime soon. Once that happens we will have a credit crunch, lower RBA cash rates, not all passed on by the banks because the cost of their borrowing will zoom up.

2012? A good time to be a Saver. A good time to be in Australia. Have a good one!

Source: Rick Adlam, Mr Mortgage [reprinted by permission]