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the real story about mortgage stress

Key takeaways

What’s really happening with mortgage stress.

Remember all those predictions of a mortgage cliff and lots of distressed selling?

Despite rising interest rates over the last couple of years, and all the talk about mortgage stress, to date households have prioritised their repayments and there is little evidence of mortgage arrears or motivated selling.

Fundamentally anyone who wants a job has a job, and with further rate rises unlikely we’re not going to see many distressed sales

What’s really happening with mortgage stress?

Remember all those predictions of a mortgage cliff and lots of distressed selling?

There is no doubt that rising interest rates and inflation have created a substantial squeeze on households with mortgages, nudging many to recalibrate their budgets.

Yet despite rising interest rates over the last couple of years, and all the talk about mortgage stress, to date households have prioritised their repayments and there is little evidence of mortgage arrears or motivated selling.

However consumer confidence is very low.

Westpac’s January consumer sentiment survey illustrates a dip in consumer confidence, reflecting financial anxiety in the wake of significant interest rate hikes since May 2022.

Westpac consumer sentiment

The sting of rising interest rates has been particularly sharp for Australian homeowners.

With borrowing costs climbing steeply — outstripping any income growth — mortgage payments now consume a larger slice of disposable income.

To manage, many households have either significantly tightened their belts or dipped into their savings while keeping up with their mortgage obligations.

This tightening of household spending is one of the mechanisms through which the RBA aims to temper demand and ease inflation.

What about mortgage stress.

So far, the commitment to mortgage repayments hasn’t wavered, with scant signs of distressed sales despite many commentators, still suggesting huge levels of “mortgage stress.”

Of course, the notion of ‘mortgage stress’ — the struggle to meet home loan repayments — remains difficult to quantify, with no standardized definition.

A survey from Finder sheds light on this, indicating over one-third of Australian mortgage holders (35%) — or about 1.1 million households — felt the pinch of their home loan payments in January.

This figure is down from June 2023’s peak of 41% but up from 24% in January 2022.

It’s important to note that these are subjective measures of stress.

While many households feel the crunch of heightened servicing costs and have adjusted their spending accordingly, they continue to meet their mortgage commitments.

Thus, the ‘official’ data on mortgage stress, which focuses on delinquent payments, paints a less dire picture.

Arrears, despite being reported with a delay, are historically low, well under pre-pandemic figures.

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