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VisitWhich loan sector is most affected by the new RBNZ lending rules by end of 2024?
Real Estate loans most affected • 33%
Personal loans most affected • 33%
Commercial loans most affected • 33%
Sector-specific lending data from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand
RBNZ Eases LVR, Tightens DTI Lending Rules Effective July 1
May 28, 2024, 01:47 AM
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) has announced significant changes to its lending rules, effective from July 1. The central bank confirms loosening of loan-to-value ratio (LVR) restrictions while simultaneously implementing new debt-to-income (DTI) restrictions. These new DTI rules will limit the amount of high-DTI lending that banks can undertake, allowing only 20% of their lending to exceed specified limits. Additionally, banks will be restricted to lending no more than six times a borrower's annual pre-tax income for house purchases. These measures aim to balance the housing market by tightening some home loan rules while providing some relief through eased LVR restrictions.
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Deutsche Bank • 25%
Commerzbank • 25%
DZ Bank • 25%
HypoVereinsbank • 25%
Construction • 25%
Real Estate Services • 25%
Retail • 25%
Manufacturing • 25%
Banking sector growth • 25%
Banking sector decline • 25%
Insurance sector growth • 25%
Insurance sector decline • 25%
Healthcare • 25%
Technology • 25%
Energy • 25%
Consumer Goods • 25%
Default rates increase • 33%
Default rates decrease • 33%
Default rates remain stable • 33%
Banking • 20%
Tech Companies • 20%
Small Businesses • 20%
Investors • 20%
Consumers • 20%
Consumer Spending • 25%
Real Estate • 25%
Higher Education • 25%
Financial Services • 25%
Technology • 25%
Manufacturing • 25%
Financial • 25%
Defense • 25%
Increase Fed Funds Rate • 33%
Decrease Fed Funds Rate • 33%
No Change in Fed Funds Rate • 33%
More domestic borrowing • 33%
More external borrowing • 33%
Balanced borrowing • 33%
Increase in interest rates • 25%
Decrease in interest rates • 25%
No change in interest rates • 25%
Introduction of new monetary policy • 25%
Compliant • 50%
Non-compliant • 50%
Increase • 50%
Decrease • 50%
No significant change in products • 33%
Increase in new loan products • 33%
Restructuring of existing loan products • 33%