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REPEAT: Australia Pvt Sector Credit Growth Slows on Biz Credit

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 01:05 GMT Oct 31/21:05 EST Oct 30
     SYDNEY (MNI) - Private-sector credit data for September published by the
Reserve Bank of Australia on Tuesday:
                            September        August     September        August
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         % Change m/m  % Change m/m  % Change y/y  % Change y/y
Total Credit                     +0.3          +0.5          +5.4          +5.4
Housing                          +0.5          +0.5          +6.6          +6.6
-Owner-occupier Housing          +0.5          +0.6          +6.3          +6.3
-Investor Housing                +0.4          +0.5          +7.2          +7.3
Business                         +0.1          +0.4          +4.3          +4.4
Other Personal                    0.0          -0.2          -1.0          -1.1
     FACTORS: Total private-sector credit growth rose at a slower pace of 0.3%
m/m in September, matching a pace last seen in February this year. The easing in
the growth pace was largely due to a slowing in business credit, which rose just
0.1% m/m, the lowest rate since February. Housing credit maintained the recent
monthly growth pace of 0.5% but, compared with August, both investor and
owner-occupier mortgage growth rates slowed. The slowing in investor mortgage
growth could be due to the switch from investor to owner-occupier mortgages of
A$1.4 billion in September. Partly explaining the continued switch is the rise
in mortgage rates for investor loans in the past few months. Personal credit
growth remained a drag, flat m/m in September with y/y growth in decline for the
21st month in a row.
     TAKEAWAY: The data shows private sector credit growth has slowed from the
6%-plus y/y growth pace posted in 2016. The slowing in investor housing credit
growth is a welcome development but given the overall slowing in housing market
activity, financial regulators may be worried about pushing down too hard on
investor lending. There is a big pipeline of apartment construction where the
majority of buyers are investors and if access to bank loans for credit-worthy
lenders becomes an issue, they could switch to non-bank lenders which could be a
bigger risk for regulators to deal with. Currently non-bank lenders' activities
are not regulated by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority.
--MNI Sydney Bureau; tel: +61 2-9716-5467; email: sophia.rodrigues@marketnews.com
[TOPICS: MTABLE]

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