You probably won't see this in the feel-good reporting of the mainstream NZ media.
I have omitted links - these are in the original article.
12
Reasons Why New Zealand's Economic Bubble Will End In Disaster
17
April, 2014
New
Zealand’s economy has been hailed as one of world’s top
safe-haven economies in recent years after it emerged from Global
Financial Crisis relatively unscathed. Unfortunately, my research has
found that many of today’s so-called safe-havens (such as
Singapore) are experiencing economic bubbles that are strikingly
similar to those that led to the financial crisis in the first place.
Though
I will be writing a lengthy report about New Zealand’s economic
bubble in the near future, I wanted to use this column to outline key
points that are helpful for those who are looking for a concise
explanation of this bubble.
Here
are the reasons why I believe that New Zealand’s economy is heading
for a crisis:
1)
Interest rates have been at all-time lows for almost a half-decade
Ultra-low
interest rate environments are notorious for fueling credit and
housing bubbles, which is how the U.S. housing and credit bubble
inflated last decade. New Zealand’s interest rates have been at
record lows for nearly five years, which is more than enough time for
economic bubbles and related imbalances to form.
Here
is the chart of New Zealand’s benchmark interest rate:
new-zealand-interest-rate
Source:
TradingEconomics.com
New
Zealand’s three-month interbank rate, base lending rate, and 10
year government bond yield are also at or near all-time lows. Like
many countries that are experiencing bubbles in recent years, New
Zealand’s low interest rates are a byproduct of global “hot
money” flows from the United States and Japan, which have both had
zero interest rates and quantitative easing programs to boost their
economies after the Global Financial Crisis.
Low
interest rates in the U.S. and Japan encouraged capital to flow into
higher yielding investments in countries such as New Zealand, which
led to reduced bond yields and an 85 increase in the value of the New
Zealand dollar against the U.S. dollar since 2009. To combat the
export-harming currency appreciation and bolster the economy during
the financial crisis, New Zealand’s central bank reduced its
short-term interest rates to all-time lows.
2)
Property prices have doubled since 2004
Following
the pattern of many nations outside of the hard-hit U.S., peripheral
Europe, and Japan, New Zealand’s housing prices have doubled in the
past decade, forming a property bubble:
HousingPrices
Source:
Global Property Guide
3)
New Zealand has the world’s third most overvalued property market
The
doubling of New Zealand’s housing prices in the past decade far
surpassed household income and rent growth, making the country’s
property market the third most overvalued in the world. New Zealand’s
home price-to-rent ratio is 77 percent above its historic average and
its home price-to-income ratio is 26 percent above its historic
average.
4)
New Zealand’s mortgage bubble grew by 165% since 2002
New
Zealand’s housing bubble is driven by a mortgage bubble that grew
from approximately NZD $70 billion in 2002 to NZD $186 billion in
2013 – a 165 percent increase in a little over a decade. New
Zealand’s mortgage debt bubble grew at a faster rate than its
economy during this time, causing the country’s total outstanding
mortgage debt-to-GDP ratio to rise from approximately 57 percent to
85 percent.
5)
Nearly half of mortgages have floating interest rates
New
Zealand’s ultra-low interest rate environment has encouraged the
country’s home buyers to make many of the same mistakes that the
American home buyers did during last decade’s bubble. One of the
gravest of these mistakes is using adjustable or floating rate
mortgages, which will reset at higher interest rates when the low
interest rate environment ultimately ends.
Almost
half of New Zealand’s outstanding mortgages currently have floating
interest rates, which is up significantly in the past decade:
Variable
Mortgage Rates
Chart
source: MacroBusiness
6)
Mortgages account for 60% of banks’ loan portfolios
As
if the fact that almost half of New Zealand’s mortgages have
floating rates isn’t scary enough, mortgages now account for 60
percent of the country’s banks’ loan portfolios, which means that
the financial sector is heavily exposed to the eventual popping of
the housing bubble.
7)
Finance, not agriculture, is New Zealand’s largest industry
Though
New Zealand is commonly thought to be an agriculture-based economy,
this couldn’t be further from the truth. Agriculture accounts for
only 5.1 percent of New Zealand’s GDP, while the finance, insurance
and business services sector is the country’s largest sector,
contributing 28.8 percent to the GDP. Furthermore, banks account for
80 percent of the total assets of New Zealand’s financial system.
Not only is New Zealand’s banking system dangerously exposed to the
country’s property and credit bubble, but so is the entire economy.
8)
New Zealand’s banks are exposed to Australia’s bubble
New
Zealand’s banking system is dominated by four banks that are
Australian-owned subsidiaries, which means that New Zealand’s
banking system is exposed to the inevitable popping of Australia’s
credit and property bubble. Australia’s household debt-to-income
ratio recently rose to 177 percent from approximately 110 percent in
the year 2000, while housing prices increased 150 percent in nominal
terms and 85 percent in real terms. Australia’s housing market is
now the world’s fifth most overvalued housing market.
9)
Australian and Chinese buyers are inflating the property bubble
An
influx of foreign home buyers in recent years has contributed to the
inflation of New Zealand’s housing bubble. Australians and Chinese
– who both hail from countries that are experiencing bubbles –
account for 42 percent of these foreign buyers, which means that the
false prosperity booms in Australia and China are spilling over into
New Zealand’s housing market.
Here
are a few statistics about China economic bubble:
- China’s total domestic credit more than doubled to $23 trillion from $9 trillion in 2008, which is equivalent to adding the entire U.S. commercial banking sector.
- Borrowing has risen as a share of China’s national income to more than 200 percent, from 135 percent in 2008.
- China’s credit growth rate is now faster than Japan’s before its 1990 bust and America’s before 2008, with half of that growth in the shadow-banking sector.
(Note:
Both New Zealand and Australia are also exposed to the coming popping
of China’s economic bubble because their economies rely heavily on
exports to China.)
10)
New Zealand has a household debt problem
New
Zealand has the fourth worst household debt-to-GDP ratio among
advanced economies, surpassing even the United States:
Household Debt
Source:
Reserve Bank of New Zealand
New
Zealand’s household debt-to-disposable income ratio soared from 100
percent in the early-2000s to just under 150 percent in recent years
thanks in large part to the country’s mortgage bubble. New
Zealand’s ultra-low interest rates have prevented its large
household debt from becoming an even greater problem, but this
situation can change dramatically when interest rates eventually rise
again.
11)
Government overseas debt has nearly tripled since 2008
New
Zealand’s government took advantage of the plunging yields on its
bonds (which is courtesy of the global QE and ZIRP-driven bond
bubble) after the Global Financial Crisis to nearly triple its
overseas borrowing:
Overseas Debt
Source:
Wikipedia; RBNZ
The
global bond bubble has provided New Zealand’s government with a
low-cost borrowing opportunity that is unlikely to be replicated
anytime soon, especially now that the U.S. Federal Reserve is slated
to completely taper or end its QE3 bond buying program this year.
12)
The New Zealand dollar is overvalued
Hot
money inflows (a byproduct of QE and zero interest rate policies)
into New Zealand after the financial crisis helped the New Zealand
dollar to strengthen by 85 percent against the U.S. dollar:
NZD/USD
Source:
XE.com
After
its strong appreciation against both the U.S. and Australian dollars
over the past decade, the New Zealand dollar is now overvalued by as
much as 20 percent according to some estimates. New Zealand’s
Finance Minister Bill English stated in February that the overvalued
dollar is “a concern” because it risks harming the country’s
exporters. If the New Zealand dollar’s overvaluation was to
abruptly correct and even overshoot to the downside (a possible
result of the Fed’s taper), New Zealand’s central bank may be
forced to hike its key interest rate to prevent further declines.
How
New Zealand’s Economic Bubble Will Pop
New
Zealand’s economic bubble will likely pop as a result of rising
interest rates across the yield curve, which would put pressure on
the country’s property and credit bubbles. New Zealand’s key
interest rate is expected to continue rising after its March hike due
to rising domestic inflationary pressures, while longer-term bond
yields are likely to rise as a side-effect of the Fed’s taper and
eventual Fed Funds rate increase. The popping of Australia and
China’s bubbles are two other external factors that have a high
probability of contributing to the popping of New Zealand’s bubble.
Here
is what to expect when New Zealand’s economic bubble truly pops:
Here
is what to expect when New Zealand’s economic bubble truly pops:
- The property bubble will pop
- Banks will experience losses on their mortgage portfolios
- The country’s credit boom will turn into a bust
- Over-leveraged consumers will default on their debts
- Stock and bond prices will fall; the New Zealand dollar may weaken
- Economic growth will go into reverse
- Unemployment will rise
I
will be publishing a full comprehensive report about New Zealand’s
economic bubble in the near future, so please follow the directions
below to receive my updates.
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