These
are small banks that are either not involved in fractional reserve
banking or exposed to the international derivatives markets.
Something smells not right here.
At the very least, alarm bells should be ringing about housing bubbles.
Small
NZ banks on notice over housing risk - S&P
Standard
& Poor's, the global credit rating agency, has put eight local
banks on notice over the rising risk of a housing bubble bursting in
New Zealand
17 May, 2013
Smaller
lenders Cooperative Bank, Heartland Bank, TSB Bank, Credit Union
Baywide, Credit Union South, First Credit Union, New Zealand
Association of Credit Unions and Police and Families Credit Union
have all had their outlooks dropped to negative from stable, giving
them a one-in-three chance of being downgraded in the next two years
if the country's economy deteriorates, S&P said in a statement.
The
outlook for bigger lenders, including ANZ Bank New Zealand, ASB Bank,
Bank of New Zealand, Westpac New Zealand, Bank of India (New
Zealand), Rabobank New Zealand and Kiwibank, was left unchanged due
to expected support from their parents.
The
rating agency said persistent current account deficits and a heating
property market were threats to the New Zealand economy. New
Zealand's current account deficit is forecast to keep widening to 6.5
per cent of gross domestic product by 2017 as trade surplus from
exported goods falls in the wake of the drought and the deficit from
imported services remains elevated.
"We
consider that there is an increasing risk that a sharp correction in
property prices could occur if there is a weakening in the country's
macroeconomic factors," S&P said.
If
those threats materialise, "banks' credit losses could rise
materially, given that there was a build-up in housing prices and
domestic credit over the period preceding the global financial
crisis," it said. "We consider that such a scenario would
have a high impact on the banking sector and the financial strength
of the balance sheets of New Zealand banks."
Finance
Minister Bill English said this morning "it was vital to act"
on New Zealand's housing bubble in yesterday's Budget to avoid it
bursting and causing widespread destruction, as happened in the
United States, Spain and Ireland.
The
Government aims to build 39,000 new houses in Auckland over the next
three years which, on top of the gathering pace of the Christchurch
rebuild, it hopes will provide momentum to the economy, increase its
revenue and boost job numbers.
English
made his comments on Radio New Zealand this morning.
"What
we've learned from the global financial crisis is that in countries
like Spain and the US, where they've had housing bubbles, is that
there is widespread destruction when those bubbles burst, and Ireland
has been the same. We must learn the lessons from those countries
that 12-15 per cent compound house price increases are dangerous for
an economy and that's why we need a collective will to help solve
this problem.
"The
measures that we're putting in place aren't going to solve the
problem overnight but they are a very definite step in the direction
of increasing supply."
An
$18 billion residential rebuild in Canterbury is seen as the backbone
for New Zealand's economic growth over the coming four years, and the
Treasury ramped up its forecast housing inflation, which is seen
peaking at a 7.1 per cent annual pace this year and the next.
New
Zealand's bubbling property market is seen as a threat to the
country's financial stability, with the International Monetary Fund
yesterday saying local housing is about 25 per cent over-valued and
the Reserve Bank last week threatening to introduce restrictions on
low equity loans if they pose a "significant risk" to the
system.
S&P
said some of the Reserve Bank's planned initiatives to managing
banking sector risks could mitigate the country's vulnerabilities.
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