What are the big 4 banks worth as the housing market falters?

A toy house sits on a pile of Australian $100 notes.

With looming changes to the capital gains tax treatment for investment in housing, Citi Research has downgraded its outlook for the housing market, and by extension, the big four banks.

In a research report published this week, Citi says it has downgraded its credit growth assumptions to 4% system growth by FY27, with business at 5%, and mortgage credit at 3.5%.

Bank earnings to come under pressure

Citi said re the banks:

This drives modest earnings downgrades for the majors on our numbers. The policy impact adds to the already unfavourable stagflation outlook for the Australian banks, with close to peak rates, slowing growth and rising credit risk.

Citi said there was “prior precedent” that could help investors understand the impact of regulatory intervention in the housing market.

Given Australia’s fascination with property, this is not the first attempt to bring investor animal spirits in check. The mid-2010s saw a vast slowdown in investor credit as APRA applied a speed limit to investor credit growth, strengthened serviceability and other changes were made to borrowing power and risk weights. The net result was a slowdown in investor credit from ~11% to ~2% over 15 months. Similar tightening took place across the Royal Commission period as tightening of serviceability by the banks saw investor credit fall from ~4% to 0% over an 18-month period. Investor lending commitments were down ~30-40% in both instances.

Citi said that with fewer investors in the market, the question was whether there would be an offset from more owner-occupiers, including first-home buyers.

They said:

Back in the mid-2010s, despite investor credit decelerating from ~11% to ~2%, we saw overall housing credit only experience a ~1% slowdown because less investor credit was offset by owner occupier credit accelerating from ~5% to ~9%. With a clearer playing field, the owner occupiers effectively stepped into the gap, a move that was aided by falling rates which improved borrowing capacity.

ANZ leading the pack

In terms of the banks, Citi’s order of preference is ANZ Group Holdings Ltd (ASX: ANZ) with a buy rating, National Australia Bank Ltd (ASX: NAB) and Westpac Banking Corporation (ASX: WBC) both with a neutral rating, and Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) with a sell rating.

Citi said:

We think CBA’s multiple holds greatest risk to a slowdown in the housing market given its stretched starting point, and hence we reiterate our Sell Rating.

Citi has price targets of $39.25 for ANZ, $135 for Commonwealth Bank, $36.75 for NAB, and $39 for Westpac.

The post What are the big 4 banks worth as the housing market falters? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Citigroup is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Motley Fool contributor Cameron England has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.