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Bank Negara Malaysia has put
in place a rule that allows banks to lend only up to 70 per cent of the
house value.
The new mortgage lending rule, which applies only to borrowers taking up
a third housing loan, is meant to curb excessive investment and
speculative activity in urban areas.
"While Malaysia is not experiencing a general property price bubble,
targeted pre-emptive measures are appropriate to moderate the increases
in property prices that are evident in select locations, arising from
purchases that are speculative in nature.
"This measure is expected to moderate excessive investment and
speculative activity in the residential property market and to ensure
affordability of homes for genuine house buyers," Bank Negara governor
Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz said in her keynote address at the Financial
Industry Conference in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.
She gave the assurance that financing facilities for the purchase of
first and second homes would not be affected and that borrowers would
still be able to obtain financing for these at the current loan-to-value
ratio (LVR) applied by individual banks, based on their internal credit
policies.
The new rule takes effect immediately. Banks were previously not
subjected to any curbs on mortgage lending. The Association of Banks in
Malaysia (ABM), whose members comprise the country's 23 commercial
banks, supported Bank Negara's move, saying that it was "timely and
pre-emptive".
"While the banking sector is wholly in support of house ownership, we
agree that appropriate measures should be adopted to avert unhealthy
speculative activities which could lead to a property bubble," its
chairman Datuk Seri Abdul Wahid Omar said in a statement yesterday.
Abdul Wahid, who is also the chief executive officer of top lender
Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank), said the move was not expected to dampen
or have an adverse impact on the growth of residential property
development, nor on the banks' house financing business.
The ABM and its member banks had engaged with Bank Negara on the matter
prior to the latter coming out with the ruling.
A banking analyst from a foreign brokerage noted that most banks,
particularly the bigger ones, already adopt strict LVR on borrowers
taking up a second, and especially third, housing loan, with location
also being an important factor.
As such, the analyst agreed with Abdul Wahid that the new rule was not
likely to have a big impact on the banks' mortgage business.
"On a third loan, it's already quite hard to get an 80 per cent LVR
now," she remarked. For a first loan, banks usually lend up to 90 per
cent of the house value, or even up to 100 per cent in some cases.
The country's biggest mortgage players by market share are Public Bank
Bhd, CIMB Bank Bhd and Maybank.
Property developer Mah Sing Group Bhd also does not see the new rule
hurting overall sentiment of the market significantly as it comprises
mainly first-time buyers and upgraders.
Neither does its group managing director Tan Sri Leong Hoy Kum see a
property bubble building up as the price increases have been largely
those of properties with good concepts by well-known developers and in
good locations.
Zeti, in her speech, noted that residential property prices in the
country had increased steadily in tandem with economic development and
rising household income.
"In the more recent period, however, certain specific locations,
particularly in the urban centres, have experienced faster growth, both
in house prices and the number of transactions. Supporting this trend
has been the increase in financing for multiple-unit purchases by a
single borrower. This suggests investment activity that is of a
speculative nature," she said.
Property prices in Malaysia rose 5.6 per cent in the first quarter of
this year and 4.2 per cent in the second quarter, according to Bank
Negara.
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