Posted: 2022-10-19 02:14:16

The outgoing boss of Australia's banking regulator has denied responsibility for the latest housing boom and bust, while adding that the price falls may be good for the nation.

In his final public appearance as Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) chair, Wayne Byres repeated that the regulator did not have a mandate to control housing prices.

"APRA's interest in housing stems from our job to protect bank depositors — who provide the funds that banks lend for housing — and from seeking to promote overall financial system stability," he said in a lunchtime speech hosted by FINSIA.

"We do that through ensuring bank balance sheets are sound and lending standards are appropriate."

A head-and-shoulders shot shows a middle-aged white man in a dark suit and red tie with short cropped dark hair
Wayne Byres is stepping down from his role as APRA chair on October 30, but his replacement has yet to be announced.(Reuters: Jason Reed)

"Incidentally, that benefits borrowers (by limiting their capacity to overextend themselves) and impacts housing prices (through influencing the demand curve for housing) but both of those are indirect consequences of our core tasks: they are not our goals."

Mortgage 'repayment shock'

However, question marks remain over whether APRA has adequately limited borrowers' capacity to overextend, given that in July 2019 it removed a floor on the interest rate to be used to assess how much someone could borrow.

Instead, borrowers could be assessed on whether they could afford repayments if interest rates 2.5 percentage points above their initial mortgage rate.

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