RBA Report Exposes Key Lending Risks


RBA-Report-Exposes-Key-Lending-Risks-FinanceTalkAustralia -- Small Business Loans


For the first time, a unique report on the Australian mortgage market has been published by the Reserve Bank of Australia which reveals disturbing details on intrinsic market risks. An estimated 72,000 home loans between 2009 and early 2014 have been analyzed and the report findings showed that borrowers with a higher LVR (loan to valuation ratio) loan were more than three times to fall behind in their repayments.

An estimated 1,300 of the 72,000 home loan samples analyzed were found to be in arrears by more than 90 days at some point of the loan term. But loans with LVR between 90% and 100% are estimated to be 3.5 times more likely to enter into arrears compared to loans with LVR of less than 60%.

The report findings indicate only a non-linear increase of the risk of entering arrears. And the subhazard or risk is specifically high for loans with LVR between 90% and 100%. Loans with LVR between 80% and 90% are found to have a subhazard of entering arrears by 1.1 times more than loans with LVR between 60% and 80%. In other words, loans with higher LVR tend to enter into arrears more than loans with lower LVR, according to Matthew Read, Cianni La Cava, and Chris Stewart, officials of the Reserve Bank of Australia.

The RBA report, Mortgage-related Financial Difficulties: Evidence from Australian Micro-level Data which was released on November 26th is the first-of-its-kind paper to use micro-level data to quantitatively analyze financial difficulties in Australia that are mortgage-related.

The distinctive report found evidence that suggests significant correlations between ability-to-pay and equity factors, and the incidence of mortgage stress.

Additionally, it established that slower repayments indicate that an increase in interest-only loans means an equivalent increase in risk even if interest-only loans are not as likely to enter into arrears. What had been found to more likely enter arrears are low-doc loans compared to other types of loans even if strict screening on the borrower’s employment status was made.

Such clearly suggests that sound income documentation and verification policies should be maintained by lenders and with the supervisors continuing to monitor developments in order to ensure timely payment of loans.


With the report’s findings, the Reserve Bank of Australia could use the data as an input that would help Australian banks and mortgage lenders to determine and test the risk level of their home loan exposures.  Australia’s central bank also believes the report findings and information would be helpful in framing the design of the prudential policy structure. In essence, RBA can use the information to help make informed decisions about the risk level lenders, investors and regulators are willing to accept.  

0 comments