Sweden Housing Crash Coming Up
Average Swede to Repay Mortgage in 140 Years
Swedish repay their mortgages so slowly that it will take 140
years on average, according to the IMF.
The International Monetary Fund lamented Friday that Swedish
households pay their mortgages so slowly that they are planning to
do an average of 140 years.
"Financial stability is [...] reinforced by a steady reduction
in repayment schedules - that exceed an average of 140 years," the
IMF said in a statement after a mission in Sweden.
This statistic was revealed in March by a government agency,
the inspection of the financial sector. It covers loans considered
relatively safe, those where the real estate buyer had an initial
contribution equal to or greater than 25% of the value of the
property and pay the higher monthly interest alone.
According to the Washington-based institution, the Swedish
real estate market is a major risk to the economy, along with the
eurozone crisis.
"With household debt rising beyond 1.7 times disposable
income, a sudden and significant drop in property prices could
have an effect on consumption and banks, raising unemployment and
further reduce the inflation, and increased the number of
non-performing loans and financing costs for banks, "said the IMF.
Why bother paying anything at all? Yet think of the consequences
of underwater mortgages on the banking system when an estate does
not have enough money to repay loans. A housing bust will have
enormous consequences in such a setup.
Swedish Central Bank Ponders New Rules
Sweden is in the midst of a property bubble and a debt bubble, so
much so that the risk mentioned above was noticed by the Swedish
central bank.
And central banks are always at the tail end of noticing risks of
the policies they sponsor.
Please consider Swedes' high debts spark housing bubble fears.
Martin Andersson, the head of Sweden's Financial Supervisory
Authority (Finansinspektionen), expressed his concern about
Swedes' mounting debts. “Swedish households today are among the
most indebted in Europe and we cannot have household lending that
spirals out of control,” Andersson said.
One tool already in place to dampen the growth of Swedish
household debt is a mortgage lending ceiling introduced in 2010
which caps the amount home buyers can borrow at 85 percent of the
value of the property.
Riksbank head Stefan Ingves has also suggested new rules that
would require Swedes to pay down the principal on their mortgages,
although Andersson refused to say whether his agency would
consider such a rule.
Last year, Swedes' household debt hit a record 173 percent of
disposable income, well above the 135 percent level during the
height of Sweden's banking crisis in the early 1990s.
Sweden Housing Crash Coming Up
By the time central banks notice bubbles and begin to discuss ways
to alleviate them, it is far, far too late to do anything about
them. A housing crash with huge consequences is 100% certain.
The longer it takes before the crash begins, the worse the crash.
Saturday, June 8, 2013
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