New Zealand's financial system is sound but housing market vulnerabilities remain a key risk and the central bank still wants to curb high debt-to-income lending if necessary, it said in its twice-yearly financial stability report.
Since the last report, house price inflation has moderated and banks are more resilient to a market downturn, but houses remain overvalued in many parts of the country and some homeowners are vulnerable to a potential fall in incomes or a rise in mortgage rates, it said. "A further resurgence in house prices would be of real concern, given existing affordability constraint," it said.
In response to the stability report, Westpac said they expect house prices to rise just 3 per cent this year compared to nearly 14 per cent last year.
New Zealand's housing market has been running hot, spurred by record high immigration and record low interest rates. Over the past several years, the central bank has introduced loan-to-valuation ratios on borrowing for housing in a bid to curb lending. The central bank said the LVRs have had an impact, with annual national house price inflation, as measured by the Real Estate Institute's house price index, at 8 per cent in April from around 14 per cent in October. However, while they have helped insulate the banking system from a housing downturn, low mortgage interest rates have encouraged an increase in high debt-to-income lending.
"Borrowers with high DTI ratios are typically more exposed to a rise in interest rates or a decline in income," it said. Earlier this year, Finance Minister Steven Joyce called for a full cost-benefit analysis on proposed debt-to-income home lending limits and said public consultation will be conducted by the Reserve Bank before any decision is made on the potential use of the additional macro-prudential policy tool.