The Reserve Bank's restrictions on the level of mortgage lending with low deposits took more borrowing out of the system than expected, and have helped douse the property market's potential risk to the nation's financial stability.
House sales dropped 11 per cent since the central bank imposed the restrictions on high loan-to-value ratio lending, with a 23 per cent slump in turnover of houses under $400,000. That's more than the bank's estimates of a 3 per cent to 8 per cent reduction in house sales, according to the Reserve Bank's six-monthly financial stability report. The restrictions were estimated to have slowed house price inflation by 2.5 percentage points.
Governor Graeme Wheeler said the country's financial system remains sound and is well-placed to support the economy, though there are still risks emanating from the high levels of debt in the household and dairy sectors.
"Debt in the household sector remains high relative to income, and house prices are overvalued on several measures," Wheeler said in a statement. "As a result, financial stability could deteriorate if there is a sharp correction in house prices, particularly if accompanied by a reduction in debt repayment capacity."
The central bank limited the level of low-equity home loans banks could write from October as a means to take the sting out of a heating property market, particularly in Auckland and Christchurch, without having to resort to early interest rate hikes, which may have fuelled demand for an already elevated currency. Since then, the bank has embarked on a tightening policy, hiking the official cash rate twice to 3 per cent.