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APRA move means extra borrowing power

May 29, 2019 BY

RiskWise CEO Doron Peleg said that if the stress test was reduced or removed it would improve borrowing capacity. Photo: SUPPLIED

APRA’S scrapping of the 7 per cent ‘stress test’ buffer on home loans will effectively see a 9 per cent increase in borrowing capacity for owner-occupiers which will rise to between 13 and 14 per cent if the RBA undertakes two interest rate cuts before the year is out, according to RiskWise Property Research.

CEO Doron Peleg said that with the current ultra-low interest rate and two interest rate cuts projected by the RBA, APRA’s 7 per cent ‘stress test’ was a major barrier for borrowers in an already highly regulated and scrutinised lending environment.

APRA’s introduced a 7 per cent ‘floor assessment’ to the ADIs in December 2014. Mr Peleg said while at that time this instruction to the ADIs was required, this conservative approach could not be applied to the lending landscape of 2019.

“In 2014, there was a tangible risk that in the foreseeable future interest rates might increase materially,” Mr Peleg said.

“Further, a high proportion (44 per cent) of the loans were interest-only and 12 per cent of the loans had LVR of 90 per cent.

“That, alongside loose controls over the accuracy of the information provided by prospective borrowers in loan applications and reliance on the HEM to assess household expenses, provided justification for APRA’s instruction.”

He said the banks also applied a slightly higher rate of 7.25 per cent to ensure they were above the minimum threshold.

However, Mr Peleg said since then the lending environment had completely changed and APRA’s requirement had become ultra-conservative.

“Interest rates are now very low with a very high likelihood of additional cuts by the RBA, and no signs of increases in the foreseeable future,” he said.

“A low interest rate environment has, effectively, become the ‘new normal’ in Australia. Loan applications are heavily scrutinised, lenders are applying more conservative credit policies, the proportion of interest-only loans is now low with only 16 per cent of the new loans (December 2018) being interest-only and 7 per cent of loans at 90 per cent.”

RiskWise undertook a case study of a scenario involving a married couple, who both receive average weekly earnings at their full-time jobs, and have two children.

The couple require a loan of 30 years and their only expenses are either HEM or HEM X 1.5, and the assumption is they have no credit card repayments and other expenses.

“Our analysis showed that due to the scrutinising of loan applications and by applying the effective 7.25 per cent ‘stress test’ this materially reduced their borrowing capacity by 33 per cent,” Mr Peleg said.

“The borrowing capacity of $698,000, based on the HEM and ‘floor assessment’ of 7.25 per cent, is equivalent to HEM X 1.5, with an interest rate of 2.87 per cent.