Debt stress in Australian mining towns vexes investors

31 Mar, 2017

Australia's quarter-century run of uninterrupted economic growth has made its property market one of the world's most expensive, but mortgage pain in towns hit by a commodities downturn is beginning to be felt in parts of the financial system.
While most Australians are able to pay their debts, alarm bells have sounded around pockets of distress in the mining-heavy states, raising warnings from policymakers, ratings agencies and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
In the remote mining town of Karratha in Western Australia, 61-year-old Peter Lynch received a letter advising him that his bank was going to repossess his house at the end of the March.
"My property in 2010 was worth A$905,000, today it's worth A$260,000," Lynch said, estimating that seven out of 20 homes on his suburban street were for sale.
Two decades ago, Lynch borrowed money to buy a five-bedroom house in the town, thinking his job as a railway maintenance worker at Rio Tinto would last until he retired.
But the end of a one-in-a-century mining boom changed all that. He now owes A$222,000 ($168,764) and earns A$42,000 a year as a cleaner, or roughly half his pay at the mine.
Western Australia is the hardest hit Australian state with delinquencies topping 2.1 percent, up by nearly half year-on-year, according to credit ratings house S&P Global.
S&P Global said that 30-day arrears on mortgages packaged in issued securities are at multi-year highs.
Alena Chen, a senior analyst at Moody's, expects rising underemployment and weak wage growth to drive delinquencies higher in mining-intensive states.
Signs of stress are now showing in the mortgage insurance market - shares in Australia's largest mortgage insurer, Genworth Mortgage Insurance, are down 19 percent since early February.
The company, which provides protection to lenders from borrowers defaulting on their home loans, last month reported an 11 percent profit drop in 2016 due to a jump in mortgage delinquencies.
Australian borrowers typically pay for insurance when they have less than a 20 percent deposit on their home purchase.
Genworth said in February last year's loss ratio of 35.1 percent, up from 24 percent in 2015, reflected higher average paid claims in resources-exposed regions, particularly Queensland and Western Australia.
Australia's arrears rate of under 1 percent, according to industry estimates, is still modest compared with the US peak of 27 percent seen during the 2007-2009 subprime mortgage crisis, and Australia has almost no subprime loans as such.
For now, rising arrears have not materially impacted the wider property market or financial system.
The major banks remain in good health and the mortgage-backed securities market, which finances the loan books of smaller banks and lenders, enjoys strong investor demand. And unlike the US, Australia has had no mortgage-backed bond defaults.
But investors and economists are worried stress could spread should there be a sudden loss of faith in the property market.
Real estate is a national obsession in Australia where two-thirds of households own a home. Since 2009, home values in the nation's largest city of Sydney have more than doubled, while Melbourne has increased 88 percent.
Australian households are among the world's most indebted with a debt to disposable income ratio at an all-time peak around 180 percent, compared with about 100 percent in Germany and 150 percent in the US.

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