Header Ad Module

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Asia Aims to Succeed Where Bernanke Failed on Bubbles

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Asia Aims to Succeed Where Bernanke Failed on Bubbles

    Asia Aims to Succeed Where Bernanke Failed on Bubbles (Update1)

    By Shamim Adam and Seyoon Kim


    Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Policy makers from South Korea to Singapore, confronted with rising real-estate values that threaten to mimic in Asia the U.S. mortgage bubble that roiled the global economy, are stepping up efforts to rein in prices.
    Regulators in South Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore told banks in recent weeks they need to tighten lending standards. Central banks including India’s and South Korea’s have signaled a readiness to raise interest rates in the coming months.
    Officials are trying to apply a lesson U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke identified from the financial crisis that erupted in 2007: constrain “excessive” leverage before it destabilizes the economy. At risk is sustaining the economic expansion of the region leading the world out of recession.
    “Asset bubbles are something that authorities have to contend with quickly and not let run away,” said Tai Hui, head of Southeast Asian economic research at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore. “Central banks are ready to take some of the wind out of the sails whether through interest rates or administrative measures.”
    In Hong Kong, where mortgage rates are the lowest in at least 19 years, home prices have climbed 26 percent this year, spurring authorities to tighten down-payment requirements for luxury homes. A one-bedroom, 816-square-foot apartment in the city’s Kowloon district last month sold for HK$24.5 million ($3.2 million).
    Stocks Retreat
    Hong Kong’s index of finance stocks jumped 60 percent this year, and a measure for property shares is up 67 percent. Stocks tumbled today after last week’s announcement on reining in the real-estate market, with the financial gauge dropping 1.3 percent and the property index losing 3.3 percent at 11:13 a.m.
    Singapore’s private-residential developers sold 10,000 units in the first seven months of 2009, more than the 4,300 sold the whole of last year. In South Korea, bank lending to households expanded for a seventh straight month in August as home prices rose.
    Stocks are also surging in some markets. China’s Shanghai Composite Index is up 71 percent so far this year, compared with the 25 percent gain in the MSCI World Index, and benchmarks from Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan are all up more than 50 percent. By comparison, the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index has advanced 20 percent.
    The advance in asset prices is also reprising debate over whether to respond with interest rates, or tighter rules for financial companies to restrain credit growth. Analysts said a combination of approaches is likely.
    ‘Challenge’ for Rates
    “The challenge for the central banks is whether you want to raise interest rates because asset prices could” cause a relapse of what befell advanced economies, said Robert Subbaraman, chief economist for non-Japan Asia at Nomura International Ltd. in Hong Kong. “We’re starting to see kinds of quasi-type monetary policy through regulating prudential measures to try to lean against a rapid rise in asset prices.”
    Fed policy makers, who had previously judged that asset- price swings weren’t a province for the central bank, abandoned that orthodoxy as the U.S. mortgage collapse triggered $1.6 trillion of credit losses and writedowns to date.
    San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen said in April that “what has become patently obvious is that not dealing with certain kinds of bubbles before they get big can have grave consequences.” Bernanke said in New York a year ago that “one of the key issues that’s going to be debated as we look at the problem of bubbles in the future is: What should be the leading approach? Should it be monetary policy, or should it be supervisory and regulatory policy.”
    Asian officials are taking steps in both directions.
    Policy Mix
    In Singapore, the government barred interest-only loans for some housing projects last month. It also stopped allowing developers to absorb interest payments for apartments that are still being built.
    Hong Kong authorities on Oct. 23 limited buyers of homes costing more than HK$20 million to borrowing 60 percent of the property’s value, down from 70 percent before. The Hong Kong Mortgage Corp., a government-backed home-loan insurer, suspended insurance for homes that aren’t owner-occupied.
    South Korea’s financial regulator said Oct. 8 it plans to tighten regulations on non-banking finance companies’ lending to households, and authorities have cut loan-to-value ratios in mortgages to 50 percent from 60 percent in some Seoul areas. In the past month, China’s five largest banks were told to increase write-offs against bad loans and maintain their capital adequacy.
    Besides such administrative measures, Asia’s central banks will need to “put a tight watch on monetary policies” to prevent asset bubbles, the Asian Development Bank said Sept. 22.
    Rate Moves
    Australia acted early this month, with a quarter point increase in the central bank’s benchmark rate. Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens said Oct. 15 policy makers who made rapid rate cuts cannot be “too timid” when it comes time to reverse the stimulus. Bank of Korea Governor Lee Seong Tae said the same day that rate rises may be bigger than the “usual baby step” of 25 basis points.
    The Reserve Bank of India may signal today it will reverse its deepest interest-rate cuts on record as inflation pressures build. Morgan Stanley economist Chetan Ahya said the bank may ask lenders to set aside more cash as reserves in its quarterly statement due 11:15 a.m. in Mumbai.

    "There's one way to find out if a man is honest-ask him. If he says 'yes,' you know he is a crook." Groucho Marx
Working...
X