Housing Finance — April | By the numbers
- Housing finance approvals to owner-occupiers (excluding refinancing) fell by 1.1% in April to 30,833 -- the market forecast was for a decline of 0.3% (prior rev: -2.6% from -2.8%). The annual pace of decline was little changed at -13.5% from -13.6%.
- The total value of housing finance commitments (excluding refinancing) was relatively steady at +0.2% in April to $A17.0bnbn (prior rev: -2.9% from -3.2%), which at that level are down by 17.3% over the year (prior rev -18.0% from -18.4%).
Housing Finance — April | The details
Across the segments in nominal terms for April, lending to owner-occupiers excluding refinancing increased by 1.0% to $12.6bn (-13.8%Y/Y) and commitments to investors excluding refinancing fell by 2.2% to $4.4bn (-26.0%Y/Y). Refinancing saw a 0.6% fall to $8.3bn (-10.2%Y/Y), with declines from owner-occupiers (-0.7%m/m, -8.3%Y/Y) and investors (-0.3%m/m, -14.4%Y/Y). Lending to owner-occupiers for alterations to existing properties eased by 0.4% to $275m in the month to be down by 11.6% through the year.
The state-by-state details are summarised in the table, below, across segments and buyer type.
The chart, below, tracks owner-occupier approvals (excluding refinancing) on a state-by-state and national basis.
Housing Finance — April | Insights
There was continued weakness for housing finance in April, however these data pre-date recent developments that should be supportive, which include the federal election outcome, APRA's proposal to easing serviceability assessments, the RBA rate (with the prospect of more to follow), slowing price declines according to CoreLogic's latest data and improved signals from auction clearances. To what extent these factors will impact housing finance demand we will only know in a few months' time.