New Zealand rate hikes may be positive for banks’ profitability
If the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) opts to raise interest rates in response to tightening labour markets and emerging price pressures, the net effect will probably be credit positive for New Zealand banks, says Fitch Ratings.
We expect the RBNZ to begin raising interest rates at its meeting on 18 August. Higher rates may be positive for banks’ profitability and earnings due to increased returns on bank assets, particularly loans. Rate increases would likely reduce the compression of net interest margins that tends to be seen at ultra-low interest rates.
The positive earnings impact from any rate hikes may take some time to flow through, as the vast majority of New Zealand banks’ residential mortgages are on fixed rates. Banks have already started raising mortgage rates in anticipation of future rate hikes. However, more than half of banks’ mortgage customers have fixed-rate terms of more than six months.
Rate hikes could encourage banks to increase traditional lending and reduce liquid asset holdings, though the higher cost of borrowing will also affect demand for credit. We expect credit growth to remain strong in the next year, largely driven by residential mortgage issuance.
However, growth in mortgage lending is set to decelerate modestly against a background of higher rates and tighter regulations on mortgage lending, through further loan-to-value ratio (LVR) restrictions and possible debt-to-income curbs. In other sectors, we believe business lending may pick up as strong economic conditions encourage more borrowing for investment.
If banks are able to raise lending and returns on interest-earning assets, the positive effect on profitability will be partly offset by higher funding costs. Banks’ on-call deposits have grown considerably over the last 12 months due to strong liquidity support provided by the RBNZ as well as a shift from term deposits to on-call accounts.
However, we expect deposit growth to moderate as the RBNZ continues to unwind its monetary stimulus. This will encourage banks to rely more on wholesale funding, which is more expensive than on-call deposits. We believe the degree of reliance on wholesale funding will gradually return to pre-pandemic levels over the next two years.
Any improvements in profitability could be dampened by longer-term headwinds facing banks, including rising operating expenses and intense competition in consumer lending. Some banks are investing with a goal to reduce costs, which could position them for stronger long-term profitability, but these investment strategies will face implementation risk.
There is a risk that higher interest rates could have adverse effects for asset prices in New Zealand, particularly for house prices, which increased significantly over 2020 and 1H21. Household debt is high relative to nominal disposable incomes, at 167% in March 2021, but low rates have ensured that debt servicing costs remain very manageable.
Rising interest rates may weigh on borrowers’ ability to service loans. This, combined with tighter mortgage lending restrictions, could lead to slower growth or declines in house prices over the next two years.
However, the fact that the robust economic outlook and tightening labour market are factors likely to drive rates higher should support borrower servicing capacity and limit the risk of a significant deterioration in asset quality.
We view the risks to bank asset quality posed by higher interest rates as manageable. A moderate increase in rates is unlikely to result in a substantial increase in loan impairment charges, due to interest rate buffers that banks have already built into their serviceability assessments.
We believe New Zealand banks have maintained a reasonable loan loss allowance, which should be sufficient to cover a moderate weakening in asset quality.