Summary: The govt has launched an early review of how new consumer finance legislation is affecting mortgage lending after credit reference firms reported a 20-35% drop in approvals in December.
Checking loan checks Commerce minister David Clark announced late on Friday that an apparent crackdown on new mortgage lending in December has forced the government to launch an early review of how banks are operating under the new Credit Contract and Consumer Finance Act (CCCFA).
Clark told Stuff he had asked the Council of Financial Regulators, which includes the Reserve Bank, the Treasury, Financial Markets Authority, the Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) and Commerce Commission, to bring forward a scheduled investigation into “whether banks and lenders are implementing the CCCFA as intended”.
“Banks appear to be managing their lending more conservatively at present, and this is likely due to global economic conditions. It may also be that in the initial weeks of implementing the new CCCFA requirements there has been a decision to unduly err on the side of caution,” Clark said.
“A number of factors affecting the market have occurred at the same time as the CCCFA changes, including increases to the OCR, LVR changes, and an increase in house prices and local government rates. An investigation by COFR (Council of Financial Regulators) will determine the extent to which lender behaviour, in respect of the CCCFA, is a significant factor in changes to banks’ lending practices,” he said.
Rejections galore Credit reference firm Equifax has reported a 35% drop in mortgage inquiries, while fellow credit referee Centrix reported on Friday that banks had rejected 20% of mortgage applications in December. That had reduced the overall approval rate from around 35% in November to 30% in December. It had been as high as 39% in October. Centrix estimated this would reduce new mortgage lending by almost $2 billion to $6.4b in December from 8.3b in November.
Pain-free rejection GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer said on Sunday it had rejected a £50b (NZ$100.5b) takeover bid for their consumer healthcare joint venture from Unilever. The bid of £41.7b in cash and £8.3b in Unilever shares came along with two other unsolicited and unidentified offers, GSK said. The joint venture owns brands such as Panadol, Voltaren and Nicorette.
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14% inflation Netflix US increased its main price by US$1.50/month or 14% to $15.49/month over the weekend. This was its first price hike since Oct. (The Verge)
Double deportation Australia cancelled Novak Djokovic’s visa for a second time late yesterday, forcing the unvaccinated Serbian tennis star to fly out from Melbourne to Dubai last night. Federal Immigration Minister Alex Hawke used his personal discretionary powers to cancel the visa, saying Djokovic’s presence posed a threat to public order from anti-vaccination protestors. (ABC)
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