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“Just as tightening lending conditions have not seen a fall in mortgage delinquency, so too an easing in these conditions are not likely to see them increase,” added Mr Tapang.
The ABS released the Lending Indicators data for the December quarter 2024 today, which provides the latest statistics on housing finance commitments.
“Investors have been active in building new homes in this cycle, and increasingly, owner-occupiers have been slowly returning to market as well,” stated HIA Economist, Maurice Tapang.
“Lending for new housing has seen modest growth off a low base, consistent with expectations of a slow increase in home building in 2025,” added Mr Tapang.
“The number of loans to owner-occupiers for the purchase or construction of new dwellings were up by 0.8 per cent in the December quarter 2024 compared to the same period in the previous year.
“This brought the number of owner-occupier loans for new dwellings in the 2024 calendar year to 54,400, which was 5.2 per cent higher compared to 2023.
“Lending to investors building or buying a new dwelling grew more sharply, with 19.2 per cent more investor loans for new dwellings issued in the 2024 calendar year compared to 2023.
“Investors have been key early in this cycle in adding to new housing supply and increasing the volume of properties available for rent.
“As is typical of cycles of rising interest rates, the first to return to market are investors followed by trade-up owner occupiers, first home buyers and increasingly those building a new home.
“Owner-occupiers are slowly re-entering the market, with the number of loans issued up by 5.8 per cent compared to 2023.
“The rise in owner-occupier lending has been driven by both first home buyer lending, which increased by 5.5 per cent in 2024, and non-first home buyers which rose by 6.0 per cent over the same period.
“The Government’s lending restrictions have been tightened progressively over the past 15 years. This is despite mortgage delinquencies remaining exceptionally close to zero. If the Government seeks to ease lending restrictions to first home buyers
“Even without a cut to the cash rate, home buyers of all types from investors to first home buyers and non-first home buyers have already started coming back to the market,” concluded Mr Tapang.
The number of loans issued in 2024 to owner occupiers for the purchase and construction of new dwellings increased in Western Australia (+24.6 per cent), followed by Queensland (+16.1 per cent) and South Australia (+15.1 per cent). Declines over the same period were recorded in the Australian Capital Territory (-26.7 per cent), Victoria (-5.3 per cent), Tasmania (-4.8 per cent), the Northern Territory (-1.3 per cent) and New South Wales (-1.0 per cent).
HIA’s paper on Lending is a Risky Business
“There were 48,620 new homes approved for construction in the first quarter of 2025, up by 20.8 per cent on a year earlier,” stated HIA Senior Economist Tom Devitt.
“The Housing Industry Association (HIA) calls on the newly elected Federal Government to make housing a first-order priority from day one, any delay or political grandstanding will only deepen the nation’s housing crisis,” HIA Managing Director Jocelyn Martin said today.
“A strong pipeline of new shovel-ready residential land at Mount Peter is fundamental to putting downward pressure on housing prices across the entire region,” said HIA Executive Director North Queensland, Peter Fry.
An increase of the strata building bond from 2 per cent to 3 per cent was due to take effect from 1 July 2025. In a win for the multi-residential construction industry, HIA has been advised that this increase will be deferred for a further 12 months, to 1 July 2026.