The Bank Of Mum and Dad Goes Boom!

Latest data released today from the DFA household surveys shows that a smaller number of potential first time buyers are now getting help from their parents to buy property.

This video explains what is going on.

At its height 60% of first time buyers were getting help from their parents, but this has now dropped to 20%. In addition the value of that help has fallen from around $88,000 to around $75,000, on average.

That said the total amount lent by the Bank of Mum and Dad is approaching $30 billion.

This puts the Bank of Mum and Dad among the top-10 lenders in Australia, based on the latest APRA data, in terms of loan stock.

Three drivers explain these changes. First parents are more concerned in a falling market about the equity in their property, when facing into retirement. The “ATM” has run dry. They cannot afford to pass money down the generation now.

Second despite some incentives, such as those in the Northern Territories, announced recently, many first time buyers are preferring to wait, rather than buy into a falling market and risk loosing their deposits. Plus we know that those who get help from parents are twice a likely to default in the subsequent 5 years compared with those who saved.

Third, banks are reluctant to lend, and a seagull payment is not regarded well, compared with a record of regular savings. Some lenders have stopped lending to borrowers with a Bank of Mum and Dad deposit.

Thus we think the momentum we saw last year is slowing and the Bank of Mum and Dad may be a less important factor ahead.

Some parents may decided to help pay monthly mortgage payments instead as this is a more flexible alternative and does not risk capital.

The World Just Changed – The Property Imperative Weekly 23 March 2019

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

The link to register for the Harry Dent webinar mentioned in the show.

The epic show-down – John Adams’s upcoming debate

Auction Results 23 March 2019

Domain released their preliminary results today.

The weakish results continue with a national final clearance rate of 47.7% on ongoing low volumes last week. Nothing here suggests an uptick in the market. Similar trends so far today.

Canberra reported 49 listed properties, 42 reported auctions and 21 sold with 3 withdrawn, giving a preliminary clearance on a Domain basis of 47%.

Adelaide reported 62 listed properties, 35 reported auctions and 22 sold, with 5 withdrawn, giving a preliminary clearance on a Domain basis of 55%.

Brisbane listed 76 auctions, reported 38 and sold 24 with 3 withfrawn, giving a Domain clearance of 34%.

Monetary policy is dead

Excellent insights from Steen Jakobsen at Saxobank, who has declared that monetary policy is dead, as Fed has thrown in the towel, and central banks are committed to defying the business cycle.

Current chair Jerome Powell saw himself as a new Volcker, but last night he cemented his panicky shift since the December FOMC meeting, and instead cut the figure of Alan “the Maestro” Greenspan, who set our whole sorry era of central bank serial bubble blowing in motion.

The Fed’s mission ever since has been a determined exercise in defying the business cycle, and replacing it with an ever-expanding credit cycle. 

This latest FOMC meeting has set in motion a race to the bottom, with the European Central bank currently in the lead, but the Fed and the Bank of England are gaining fast. 

I am presently in London, and on my way to China and Hong Kong with Saxo’s Gateway to China events. I am joined at these events by the impressive Dr. Charles Su of CIB Research, China. He and I agree on many things, but one in particular: 

Monetary policy is dead.

My view has long been that monetary policy is misguided and unproductive, but the difference now is that we are reaching the most major inflection point since the global financial crisis as central bank policy medicine rapidly loses what little potency it had. In the meantime, the harm to the patient has only been adding up: the economic system is suffering fatigue from QE-driven inequality, malinvestment, a lack of productivity, never-ending cheap money and a total lack of accountability

The next policy steps will see central banks operating as mere auxiliaries to governments’ fiscal impulse. The policy framework is dressed up as “Modern Monetary Theory”, and it will be arriving soon and in force, perhaps after a summer of non-improvement or worse to the current economic landscape. What would this mean? No real improvement in data, a credit impulse too weak and small to do anything but to stabilise said data and a geopolitical agenda that continues to move away from a multilateral framework and devolves into a range of haphazard nationalistic agendas. 

For the record, MMT is neither modern, monetary nor a theory. It is a the political narrative for use by central bankers and politicians alike. The orthodox version of MMT aims to maintain full employment as its prime policy objective, with tax rates modulated to cool off any inflation threat that comes from spending beyond revenue constraints (in MMT, a government doesn’t have to worry about balanced budgets, as the central bank is merely there to maintain targeted interest rates all along the curve if necessary).

Most importantly, however, MMT is the natural policy response to the imbalances of QE and to the cries of populists. Given the rise of Trumpism and democratic socialism in the US and populist revolts of all stripes across Europe, we know that when budget talks start in May (in Europe, after the Parliamentary elections) and October (in the US), governments around the world will be talking up the MMT agenda: infrastructure investment, reducing inequality, and reforming the tax code to favour more employment at the low end.

We also know that the labour market is very tight as it is and if there is another push on fiscal spending, the supply of labour and resources will come up short. Tor Svelland of Svelland Capital, who joins Charles and I at the Gateway to China event, has made exactly this point. The assumption of a continuous flow of resources stands at odds with the reality of massive underinvestment. 

Central bankers and indirect politicians are hoping/wishing for inflation, and in 2020 they will get it – in spades. Unfortunately, it will be the wrong kind: headline inflation with no real growth or productivity. A repeat of the 1970s, maybe?

Get ready for bigger government and massive policy interventions on a new level and of a new nature. These will be driven by a fiscal impulse to stimulate demand rather than to pump up asset prices. It will lead to stagflation of either the light or even the heavy type, depending on how far MMT is taken.

Last night, a client asked an excellent question: how much of this scenario is already priced in? Here is my take: Saxo’s macro theme since December has been the coming global policy panic, and this has now been fully realised. The Fed proved slower to cave than even the ECB, but last night saw them give up entirely. The US-China trade deal, another key uncertainty, is priced for perfection despite plenty of things that can go wrong.

The Brexit deal, however, is extremely mispriced. The UK’s biggest challenge may not even be the circus act known as Brexit, but rather the collapsing UK credit cycle which our economist Christopher Dembik has put at risking a 2% drop in UK GDP. If nothing changes over the next six to nine months, and nothing will change, the UK economy will be in free fall. Forget Brexit, UK assets are simply mispriced from the lack of credit juice in the pipeline.

The overall China-bound inflow over the next three to five years will exceed $1 trillion China is also misunderstood and mispriced. If our two talks so far with clients on China and its opening up of its markets have taught me anything, it is that the western ‘reservation’ on anything Chinese is entirely built on bias. Governance is the word that keeps coming back in discussions. I am no fan of Chinese-style governance, but… less than 10% of global AUM is currently in China. This year alone will see the inclusion of China’s bonds in global indices like Barclays, Russell, and S&P and the allocation to China in the MSCI’s emerging markets index will quadruple from 5% to 20%. The overall China-bound inflow over the next three to five years will exceed $1 trillion using very conservative estimates.

China is perhaps the country in the world least likely to treat inbound capital poorly. It has transitioned from being a capital exporter to now being an importer. It has a semi-closed capital account, which means little money flows out, but a massive inflow is beginning to stream in as global investors acquire Chinese assets. 

China and its growth model now need to share the burden of becoming an industrialised country, and Beijing knows that only the only way keep the capital flowing in 2019 is to treat investors well. On the domestic front, meanwhile, the CPC seems to be signaling that it wants domestic investors to move excess savings from the ‘frothy’ and less productive housing market to the equity market, where capital can flow to more productive enterprises. Foreign investors are more likely to want to participate in the more liquid and familiar equity market.

2019 for China is like 2018 for the US. The first 10 months of 2018 saw the US stock market near-entirely driven by the buy-back programmes fueled by Trump’s tax reform. US companies plowed over $1 trillion into buybacks over the year. This year, the Chinese government is telling its 90 million domestic retail investors to raise their allocation to the stock market while global capital allocators/investors will need to increase their exposure to China as its capital markets are reweighted.

Housing Manhattan Style, Reality Bites

In February, the StreetEasy Manhattan Price Index dropped to its lowest level since July 2015.

Many sellers across New York City cut prices on their homes this February as winter brought a chill to the sales market. In Manhattan, more than 1 in 10 homes had their prices cut, and inventory increased by 11.7 percent from last year. With inventory levels and the share of price cuts high across the borough, prices cooled, too. The StreetEasy Manhattan Price Index [dropped 4.3 percent to $1,119,183, its lowest level since July 2015.

Even with prices down and an abundance of inventory, buyers continued to hesitate to make deals. Manhattan homes spent a median of 117 days on the market — up 27 days year-over-year, and the highest level in seven years. This trend appeared in all areas and price points across the borough. Downtown Manhattan [saw the largest increase in median days on market — up 31 from last year, to 117 days total.

“With a strong economy and home-shopping season right around the corner, plenty of New Yorkers are well-positioned to buy this spring. However, many are willing to walk away from deals that just aren’t financially attractive and continue renting instead — creating a market poised to punish sellers who don’t price their homes sensibly,” says StreetEasy Senior Economist Grant Long. “When the inevitable wave of new inventory hits the market this spring, interested buyers should expect to see an uptick in price cuts as the market forces ambitious sellers to accept reality.”

Near-prime the ‘fastest-growing sector’ of lending

The lending landscape has changed dramatically over the past year, with near-prime lending becoming the fastest-growing sector and lenders beginning to see the rise of “super prime” borrowers; via The Adviser.

Given the reduced risk appetites from the banks following the banking royal commission and an increasing trend from the majors to “simplify” their offerings, the non-bank lenders have taken a growing proportion of market share as more borrowers fall outside of the credit policies and brokers turn to non-banks for more specialised products for their clients.

Speaking on The Adviser Live webcast yesterday (21 March) for the Leadership Series – the Changing Lending Landscape, leading non-bank representatives outlined how the lending market was changing and what brokers can do to ensure they are across all the changes and offering solutions to their clients.

One of the themes from the webcast was the rapid rise of near-prime borrowers, given the reduced number of exceptions that some banks are willing to accept.

Aaron Milburn, director of sales and distribution at Pepper, revealed that the fastest-growing segment of the lending market was near-prime borrowers.

Mr Milburn said: “Near-prime lending in our industry is the fastest-growing sector of it. A lot of near-prime [deals] used to be a major bank deal with a credit exception on it, effectively, [but] that’s all tightened up now.

“So the near-prime space is our fastest-growing sector of lending at Pepper and as an industry. We see that only growing because we see no relaxation of credit policy at the majors… You think about the gig economy, you think about people that are Uber drivers, or they do Airtasker jobs at the weekend and they have been doing that for a prolonged period of time and they can prove that. Why shouldn’t they use that income? We see that sort of area growing and that is our fastest-growing area.”

Mr Milburn noted that the growing near-prime category was not just expanding in the residential space but in the commercial space too.

He said: “We’ve recently started in the commercial real estate lending

, and Mal Withers has come in to run it for us, and the near-prime sector of that credit policy, or that product, is growing substantially fast as well.”

Mr Milburn elaborated that the near-prime commercial borrower may be a commercial client who has “a small default” or a “bump in the road in the past and is trying to get back on their feet”.

“We think that customer base is bankable, as we do in the near-prime residential space, and we don’t think they should miss out, so that is an area of growth for us as well,” he said.

Building on this, Cory Bannister, VP-chief lending officer at La Trobe Financial, said that the lender had to “re-categorise” its borrower segments in the current environment, given the changing borrower make-up.

He elaborated: “We’ve even had to re-categorise almost how we determine what’s prime and near-prime. Now, when we look at it, we look at ‘super prime’, which we would say is probably what the banks are looking at now.

“Prime, which is probably the loans that would have been bankable all day, every day, which have probably slipped out [of major bank’s appetites] and near-prime is the old traditional space, and specialist sits at the end of that.”

Mr Bannister concurred that the near-prime sector was a “growing sector” but added that these were not necessarily applications that have serious credit defaults or infringements, but instead borrowers who may have had a “change of circumstances” such as a variable income or variable employment.

Looking to the future, both Mr Milburn and Mr Bannister, as well as Matt Bauld, general manager, sales and business development at Prospa, agreed that the non-bank sector would continue to flourish with the support of the broker space.

Mr Bannister concluded that he believed broker market share could reach 66 per cent in the next year, adding: “I think we will see the non-bank market share continue to grow… I think you’re seeing more of the bank simplification strategies playing out, more products being exited, [so] non-banks are doing more of the lifting now to try and provide more solutions.

“The overall credit tightening, I don’t see that being retraced any time soon, that zero exceptions policy is starting to bite.”

“I think it will be some time before we see the major banks’ credit policies change. I think it’s going to increase the broker market share and increase the non-bank market share,” he said.

Mr Milburn agreed, stating: “I think non-bank share will continue to grow… the near-prime market, whether that be residential or CRE, is going to continue to grow out because the major banks aren’t moving their credit policy in line with the changing world… The number of exceptions to that major bank policy now are reducing. So near-prime, near near-prime or super prime, those sections will continue to grow out because the majors aren’t willing to see individuals as individuals.”

Mr Milburn continued to suggest that several banks “do not have a near-prime product, they do not have a specialist product and they are not there for when customers go into times of hardship. We are. And that’s the beauty of the non-bank space, we are there for Australians who are undervalued and underserved by the major banks, and we will continue to grow that out.”

Speaking from an SME lender perspective, Mr Bauld added that non-banks would also grow in this space as brokers continue to diversify into this space.

Mr Bauld said: “We have literally scratched the service of a $20-billion-plus market, so there is massive room for continued growth, that’s why we absolutely implore brokers to look at this space and think ‘OK, how do we get involved?’ We will absolutely help them get involved…

“[So], there is a massive opportunity for the intermediated market, but they have to seize it. They really have to future-proof their business. And if they do, there is a huge and massive opportunity ahead,” he said.

Rate cuts won’t stimulate housing, says Oliver

Anyone expecting an RBA rate cut to trigger a repeat of the six-year property boom we experienced from 2011 needs to think again, according to one of Australia’s leading forecasters; via InvestorDaily.

Speaking to Investor Daily, AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said he believes Sydney is now about halfway through its correction, with top-to-bottom house price falls to reach 25 per cent in the nation’s biggest city. 

“Melbourne prices have come down by around 10 per cent. Like Sydney, I think they will come down by 25 per cent as well, so they’re not quite halfway through the downturn,” he said. “There is a wealth effect coming through from the price falls we have already seen and a wealth effect still to come from further falls in house prices.”

The property slowdown has also forced lenders like ING and Adelaide Bank to reduce credit or small businesses borrowing against their residential property. 

ING has banned borrowers from using their homes as security for business loans amid fears of negative equity as property prices continue to fall. 

A credit squeeze in the small business sector, coupled with the “wealth effect” of falling property prices, which curtails household consumption, could have serious implications for the Australian economy. 

RBA assistant governor Michele Bullock gave a speech in Perth this week in which she stated that the wellbeing of households and businesses in Australia depends on growth in the Australian economy. 

“And a crucial facilitator of sustained growth is credit – flows of funds from people who are saving to people who are investing.”

The Reserve Bank is banking on growth of 3 per cent by the end of 2019. But AMP Capital’s Mr Oliver believes a reduction in consumer spending and reduced construction activity related to housing suggests growth could be closer to 2 per cent. 

“If SMEs struggle to get credit, then it could be worse than that,” he said.

“I’m probably in the more negative camp on the wealth effect and I think the evidence is there. RBA governor Philip Lowe gave a speech two weeks ago where he said that a 10 per cent decline in net housing wealth would reduce consumer spending by 0.75 per cent in the short term and 1.5 per cent in the longer term. 

“A 10 per cent fall in net housing wealth would be equivalent to a 7 per cent fall in actual house prices, given a degree of gearing. Net housing wealth is about 75 per cent of total housing wealth, so if you’ve got a 10 per cent fall in total housing wealth, it implies a bigger impact of around 2 per cent in consumer spending.”

Unemployment is a key indicator for measuring the impact of these effects on the economy. Mr Oliver predicts the unemployment rate will increase from 4.9 per cent to 5.5 per cent by the end of the year.

Research released by the Reserve Bank of Australia shows that the central bank’s decision to begin cutting rates in November 2011, from 4.75 per cent to 1.5 per cent today, had a direct influence on booming property prices. 

The price of credit has come down significantly over the last six years, given the 3.25 per cent reduction in the official cash rate over that time. 

House prices peaked in mid-2017 and have declined by approximately 7 per cent nationally since then. In Sydney, prices have come down by around 12 per cent from their peak. 

The next rate cut by the Reserve Bank, which some believe could come as early as May, won’t have the same impact as it did eight years ago, Mr Oliver said. 

“It will provide some help to stabilise the market. But I don’t think it’s going to provide the same stimulus as it did in 2011. Household debt-to-income levels are much higher now. The banks also have much tighter lending standards than they did in 2011.

“I don’t think we’ll be off to the races again.”

Trend unemployment rate steady at 5.0%

Australia’s trend unemployment rate remained steady in February 2019 at 5.0 per cent, from a revised January 2019 figure, according to the latest information released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

But there are signs of changes ahead. Have we reached the floor?

ABS Chief Economist Bruce Hockman said: “The trend unemployment rate declined 0.5 percentage points over the year, from 5.5 per cent to 5.0 per cent. The pace of decline slowed in recent months, which was consistent with the slowdown seen in recent Job Vacancies and GDP numbers.”

Employment and hours


In February 2019, trend monthly employment increased by 20,600 persons. Full-time employment increased by 12,300 persons and part-time employment increased by 8,200 persons.

Over the past year, trend employment increased by 290,700 persons (2.3 per cent) which was above the average annual growth over the past 20 years (2.0 per cent).

The trend monthly hours worked increased by 0.1 per cent in February 2019 and by 1.9 per cent over the past year. This was slightly above the 20 year average year-on-year growth of 1.7 per cent.

Underemployment and underutilisation

The trend monthly underemployment rate decreased by less than 0.1 percentage points to 8.1 per cent in February and by 0.4 percentage points over the year. The trend underutilisation rate decreased less than 0.1 percentage points to 13.1 per cent, and by 0.9 percentage points over the year.

States and territories trend unemployment rate

The trend unemployment rate increased in Tasmania, decreased in Queensland, and remained steady in all other states and territories.

Seasonally adjusted data


The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate decreased 0.1 percentage point to 4.9 per cent in February 2019, while the participation rate fell 0.2 percentage points to 65.6 per cent. The seasonally adjusted number of persons employed increased by 4,600.

The net movement of employed in both trend and seasonally adjusted terms is underpinned by around 300,000 people entering and leaving employment in the month.

Fed Holds; Signals No Rate Changes Ahead

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in January indicates that the labor market remains strong but that growth of economic activity has slowed from its solid rate in the fourth quarter. Payroll employment was little changed in February, but job gains have been solid, on average, in recent months, and the unemployment rate has remained low. Recent indicators point to slower growth of household spending and business fixed investment in the first quarter. On a 12-month basis, overall inflation has declined, largely as a result of lower energy prices; inflation for items other than food and energy remains near 2 percent. On balance, market-based measures of inflation compensation have remained low in recent months, and survey-based measures of longer-term inflation expectations are little changed.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. In support of these goals, the Committee decided to maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 2-1/4 to 2-1/2 percent. The Committee continues to view sustained expansion of economic activity, strong labor market conditions, and inflation near the Committee’s symmetric 2 percent objective as the most likely outcomes. In light of global economic and financial developments and muted inflation pressures, the Committee will be patient as it determines what future adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate may be appropriate to support these outcomes.

In determining the timing and size of future adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will assess realized and expected economic conditions relative to its maximum employment objective and its symmetric 2 percent inflation objective. This assessment will take into account a wide range of information, including measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial and international developments.