close
MENU
1 mins to read

English hints Reserve Bank may introduce additional curbs to housing market

Finance Minister Bill English hinted that the Reserve Bank may announce further restrictions to curb the country's housing market as part of its Financial Stability Report tomorrow.

Tina Morrison
Tue, 10 May 2016

Finance Minister Bill English hinted that the Reserve Bank may announce further restrictions to curb the country's housing market as part of its Financial Stability Report tomorrow, according to news reports.

Mr English was asked by reporters if the Reserve Bank should bring in further loan-to-value ratio controls to dampen lending growth in Auckland and other housing markets, as he headed to the National Party caucus meeting at Parliament Buildings today.

"It's up to the bank," English said, according to a report on interest.co.nz. "There's still a bit of uncertainty about just what the dynamics of the Auckland market are. The bank has signalled pretty clearly that it takes the issue quite seriously and it has a range of tools and it is likely to want to use them."

Asked if he had received advice that the Reserve Bank might be reconsidering its LVR settings, he said: "Not in detail. It has the Financial Stability Report coming out tomorrow and that will probably signal direction."

The Reserve Bank's six-monthly gauge of financial stability is due for release at 9am tomorrow, and analysts have speculated that additional curbs on the housing market may free up Governor Graeme Wheeler to reduce interest rates further in the future. 

The New Zealand dollar fell after Mr English's comments were reported. It was recently trading at 67.45USc, from 67.74USc at 11:41am, immediately before the publication of the article, having touched a six-week low of 67.31USc.

(BusinessDesk)

Tina Morrison
Tue, 10 May 2016
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
English hints Reserve Bank may introduce additional curbs to housing market
58040
false