Crikey has suggested the banks shold back their own mortgage funds, so has the Future Fund’s David Murray, who is also the former head of the Commonwealth Bank. But the Australian banking and finance sector has resolutely refused to back their funds which are facing investment outflows from nervous investors.
That’s why we now have the near charade of the Federal Government offering to extend its deposit guarantee to these managed funds in the property mortgage area, if they become banks: an idea that is more silly than rational.
We now have the absurd position where the likes of the Commonwealth, refusing to provide any support for its funds management arm, Colonial, which has shut redemptions from its property mortgage fund. Effectively, Mr Rudd has allowed the likes of the Commonwealth, AXA and Perpetual to escape any responsibility for these funds, while continuing to charge management and other sneaky fees.
It’s outrageous. We have been told repeatedly that our banks are fine and strong (and the record $1.3 billion final profit from St George will confirm that today), and yet they are being allowed to wriggle off the hook in a way that they do not allow their customers and clients to follow.
It’s not just the CBA. Fifteen or more funds, including those from AXA, Perpetual and Macquarie have applied restrictions. Regular payments will continue, but in most cases, investors will be restrained from withdrawing all their funds. You have to again ask why the CBA and others in this sector are incapable of supporting their managed funds, or why they don’t want to?
Some cynics suggest that with commercial and residential property values expected to fall over the next two years, these clever folks are really getting in early and using a growing withdrawal of investor funds to try and get Government assistance before the exit becomes a flood and the funds are left illiquid and full of non-performing mortgages, or mortgages whose underlying security has slumped in value.
AXA it has a track record around the world of not supporting investment funds where there’s a flood of redemptions actually underway or threatened. It has done it here, in New Zealand and in Europe last year when the credit crunch first erupted.
The contrast with what the banks expect from ordinary home mortgagees is astounding.
Because of our local laws, banks can pursue you for monies left owing on mortgages. It’s called full recourse financing (as opposed, for example, to the non-recourse that James Packer says he has with CVC, the owner of 75% of PBL Media).
In the US, home lending is on a non-course basis in nearly every instance. It’s why home owners can walk away when they can’t pay their home loans any more or where the value of their house falls below the size of their mortgages. The keys are put in an envelope and posted to the lender in what is called “jingle mail.”
Here there’s no such luxury (which helps keep arrears and default rates low) and yet this is what the banks and others are saying and effectively doing with their mortgage investment funds by not supporting them and closing them to redemptions. It’s non-recourse to the bank or promoter of the fund and bad luck.
And the Federal Government reckons it is going to solve a difficult situation by telling the likes of the Commonwealth Bank, that the Colonial mortgage fund can get deposit guarantees by becoming a bank. That’s a mind boggling pierce of bureaucratic doublespeak, isn’t it?
All this nonsense about bailouts is so idiotic. Everyone knows we can’t afford it. The Aussie consumer is in debt to the tune of $1.88 trillion.
Any turkey can see what coming down the line: a downgrading of Australia’s credit rating at best, or a flat out sovereign default if not this year then certainly next year. I also smell an imminent currency crisis as the Aussie peso looks destined to crash sometime very soon.
Well said Glenn Dyer! Your political colleagues have gone strangely silent today after this latest insult to our intelleigence from Kev07.
I just ask why you say that this bit of nonsense is a”mind-boggling piece of bureacratic double-speak.” After all it was Kev07, our illustrious Prime Minister that I saw saying it – and throwing $80million plus into the ring. Maybe he was once a bureaucrat, but now he has risen to greater heights, he has to take ultimate responsibilty as PM for this contribution to the mess.
Well the REAL question is
HOW MANY TIMES will the Government try to “solve a difficult situation”
with our access to our deposited money?
(we have had six-of-one, so I guess we wait for the six-of-the-other).
Excellent article and the “idea that is more silly than rational” is going to cost us an additional $87million which can be added to the $75million more of taxpayer funds given to the pleasantly surprised Toyota shareholders a few months earlier.
Yet a another Rudd idea “more silly than rational” or what price an expensive photo op…..