Households
poorer as saving surge backfires
Australian
households stashed away a record $70 billion during the past
financial year, pouring money into banks and term deposits, yet when
the financial year ended they were $6 billion poorer than when they
started.
28
September, 2012
Financial
accounts from the Bureau of Statistics show per capita wealth slid 2
per cent over the year to June and 11 per cent over five years to
June, all because of falling share prices.
The
rout has since been reversed, with share prices climbing 6 per cent
since the start of July. But the sharemarket's uneven performance has
encouraged Australians to park more of their savings in banks than
ever before.
Households
held a record $726.6 billion in cash and deposits at the end of June,
accounting for 23.7 per cent of their financial assets, up from 21.9
per cent a year before.
"It's
a safe haven approach, a knee-jerk reaction to uncertainty,"
Commonwealth Securities chief economist Craig James said.
"It
comes down to confidence. People know about what has been happening
in Europe, they know about the United States, and they know about
China. So with deposit rates so high, why wouldn't you be putting
anything extra you had into term deposits?"
It's
not only households. The bureau's figures show superannuation funds
had 15.9 per cent of their assets stored in cash and deposits at the
end of June, the highest proportion on record and roughly double the
long-term average of 8.5 per cent.
Private
non-financial companies had a near-record 45.4 per cent of their
financial assets stored in cash and deposits.
Foreigners
have been buying shares where Australians have not, lifting their
ownership of the Australian sharemarket to 47.2 per cent, the highest
stake in 20 years. Foreign holdings of Australian government bonds
eased back to 78.2 per cent from a record 79.8 per cent in March.
Per
capita net financial wealth slipped from $65,044 to $63,675 over the
financial year, despite increased saving. The figure excludes wealth
held in the form of real estate but is weighed down by loans secured
against real estate.
"What's
encouraging for people who are paying off their own homes is that
home prices went up in September, and that the sharemarket has been
climbing. Household wealth could pick up," Mr James said.
"And
time cures all ills. If we get some good news out of the United
States and out of China and if people don't focus so much on Europe
and if the Australian economy continues to track along nicely, people
might start to feel wealthy again and put more of their money back
into the sharemarket."
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