Posts Tagged ‘St George Bank’

Nothing beats controlled political chaos!

.
An extraordinary week in Australian politics that resembled the “Battle of Sydney Harbour” or maybe “Battleships in the Big Bathtub” – where part of all contestants’ boundaries (by coincidence) were the high water marks of Sydney Harbour. The “Mad Monk” won line honours and yet, as with any race (fluid spill motions) there are always protests and on the very same day, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) broke tradition and raised the cash rate (+0.25%) for the third consecutive month – a day of threes!

The cash rate, now at 3.75 per cent, keeps heading north and whilst on north, rumours that “The Emperor” Kevin Rudd is auditioning for Getaway, remain totally unsubstantiated. We can however, be sure that somewhere, he is up – up – and away and if he does call a double dissolution, will have to return to our shores sooner rather than later.

Gerard Henderson wrote an interesting article that appeared in the Sydney Morning HeraldLodge is a long way off, but the new man will shore up base. “Since its formation in 1944, the Liberal Party has won office from Labor on three occasions, Robert Menzies defeated Ben Chifley in 1949, Malcolm Fraser prevailed over Gough Whitlam in December 1975 and John Howard vanquished Paul Keating in March 1996.” What I did find amazing was this “It is most unlikely that Abbott can lead the Coalition to victory in next year’s election. No government has been defeated in its first election since 1931, when Labor prime minister, James Scullin, faced not only the impact of the Great Depression but also splits within his own party.”

eMiddleHead

Was the Mad Monk bunkered down at his Mosman headquarters – whilst observing troop movements at the harbour bunkers of Turnbull and Hockey? Loose lips sink ships. We asked Tim Mooney to fly over Tony Abbott’s Mosman bunker.

www.timmooneyphotography.com

Westpac has jumped the starting gun where as quick as a flash it raised its standard variable home loan by 45 basis points to 6.76 per cent which comes into effect today. On November 5, 2009 John Rolfe from The Daily Telegraph wrote Cut Government taxes on savings, says Westpac boss Gail Kelly. It would appear to some, that raising rates has nothing to do with household savings. National Australia Bank (NAB) increased its home loan rates by +0.25 per cent and then attacked Westpac with this announcement “We are determined to be competitive, to offer our customers a better deal and attract new customers to NAB. Today we are sending a message to customers at Westpac, and the other banks, that NAB can offer them a better deal.”

“Westpac CEO Gail Kelly argued yesterday (November 4, 2009) that if we all had more money salted away the country could have ducked the global financial crisis.” So in the aftermath now that the crisis has passed one can only then assume that Westpac is quickly making up for lost opportunities. Business Spectator – THE DISTILLERY: Waving Westpac through John Durie of The Australian concludes that the bank “is acting entirely rationally by extending the duration of its loans, chasing deposits aggressively as evidenced by its present campaign offering 6.8 per cent for 12 – month money and raising the cost of loans to protect profits. Its deposits now offer 130 basis points more than its closest competitors and 145 basis points more than the ANZ. This is a bank demonstrating its market strength emphatically, unworried by the potential for either market or political downside.” Or “roughly in simpatico is Matthew Stevens of The Australian who reasons that “Westpac’s decision to confront its customers with the nasty realities of our national funding dilemma serves to, once again, demonstrate the shaping dislocation of the Australian banking system triggered by the GFC. The latest credit growth numbers, for example, confirm the widening schism of the Four Pillars into a two – and – two – configuration. The data shows that the Commonwealth and Westpac now dominate the system growth like never before, speaking for 80 per cent of loan growth over October.” Wayne Swan approved the acquisition St George Bank by Westpac.

0,,7141046,00

Market share of the big four banks, including BankWest and St George as at September 30 / Source: The Australian

.

Macquarie Economics Research wrote Interest Rate Outlook – Gradual gets quicker

  • “The RBA lifted the cash rate by 25bps in December. While the RBA’s view of the world has changed little since November, the news over the past month has reinforced their view that the recovery in train is on stable ground. We expect the cash rate to reach 4.50 % by the end of 2010.”

2-12-2009 3-02-30 PM
.
2-12-2009 2-55-16 PM
.
2-12-2009 3-03-40 PM
.

Reserve Bank Deputy Governor Ric Battellino is indeed very upbeat about the Australian economy in that we can expect and look forward to years of economic growth on the back of booming resources, escalating population growth with rising household incomes. The RBA is predicting a strong escalation of house prices because Australia had entered “a new upswing” that would extend its record 18 years of continuous economic expansion.

RP Data revealed this week that house prices have doubled to an average $600,000 over the past ten years – the average Sydney house price was $300,000 back in 1999. The average price for an apartment in 1999 was $270,000 today it is $457,274.

The latest BIS Shrapnel Residential Property Prospects report identified that residential rent are expected to rise by an average 5.8 per cent a year over the next three years. This compares with a 5.7 per cent increase in 2009 and an average annual rate of 4.4 per cent between 2002 and 2008. Throw in an electricity bill expected to rise by 60 per cent over the next three years (according to an IPART report).

Fort Crumble was at it again and we now have our fourth premier in four years – recruitment companies would be well justified in opening up a sacked premier’s division. Now we have our first female premier – Kristina Keneally (no strings attached)! Can’t wait to see who makes up her front bench? Not that she will have any say in it! The Daily Telegraph is running a petition for an early election (To Sign)

Last edition of Virtual Realty News for 2009 next week – the chaos of this week would be very hard to beat. Thankfully it is controlled – however we all know that elected politicians make great puppeteers.

Cheers ^__^

For this week’s recorded Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Cremorne Point real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

Follow Me on Twitter


The great dust – up. You can bank on that!

.
Coincidentally, Sydney this week experienced a once in a lifetime (so they say) dust – up which as it turns out was both physical and personal. One was delivered by Mother Nature and the other is the mother of all property taxes and by all reports (leaked thus far) it will take some time for the dust to settle. Since GST was introduced in 2000 on an electoral platform that taxes would come down (only to see them increased) – nine years on, Fort Fumble (Federal government) and every state and territory government is now drowning in budget deficits.

Briefly, there was a ‘red’ lining to the clouds when former US president Bill Clinton (give the man a cigar) said Kevin Rudd (The Emperor) was one of the world’s smartest leaders. Clinton said “his friend was well – read, well – informed and an expert on China.” Well Slick Willy that’s why we call him The Emperor, because just like China everything is now in the red!

.

Tim Mooney Photography

www.timmooneyphotography.com

My tax rules: the Ken Henry way by Peter Martin from The Sydney Morning Herald was certainly an eye opener or as Ken Henry puts it “a-once-in-a-generation game changer.” We have heard that before (twice this week too).
.

NO RELIEF FOR HOMEBUYERS

.
“But the Henry review has come to the conclusion that other state taxes, much complained about, aren’t actually that bad. Stamp duties on conveyancing and land transactions are changed at a time when people are already borrowing and can afford to pay them. “(Yes every Australian loves making a Stamp duty donation for nothing because in the backyard of the property they are purchasing money actually grows on trees they are purchasing.) “They don’t seem to be much slowing our relentless desire to trade up and they help claw back the untaxed profits we make from capital gains tax exemption for the family home. The review won’t recommend an end to real estate stamp duties for as long as the capital gains tax exemption remains, and even it is unlikely to have courage to recommend an end to the exemption.” You call that a once-in-a-generation game changer?

The Henry Report should be called the Titanic as there are leaks everywhere and unlike ‘leeks’, I see no green-shoots.

PAYROLL TAX TO STAY

.
“Payroll tax is also widely abhorred but from the review’s standpoint is pretty harmless.” Brilliant this comes from a person who has never paid it! “Not only will it stay in defiance of the bulk of submissions on the topic but the review will recommend it be extended by withdrawing a range of exemptions. There are taxes that genuinely hurt employment, the review believes – those that discourage foreign firms from setting up shop and staying here.”

A tarot card economic review (in my opinion) where an “abhorred tax that is pretty harmless despite bulk submissions against this” for simply employing people – now what point is he missing? The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) labour figures for August identified that Australia’s unemployment rate remained at 5.8 per cent; however the economy shed 27,100 jobs which was more than expected. How many would have been saved if we did not have Payroll Tax? We will never know! But we do know that Ken Henry predicted that Australia’s unemployment would peak at 8.5 per cent.

Now I am getting confused, so allow me to elaborate. This week, Treasury Secretary Ken Henry advised the Australian Institute of Company Directors that the Australian economy would have contracted during the global financial crisis if the government (on his recommendation) had not introduced its stimulus measures. What a no brainer, when his report promotes Fort Crumble wastage disguised as a stimulus (tax payer expense) yet rejects on the other hand, individual and business stimulus that otherwise generates and absorbs unemployment.

The Henry Report is a no -no- no report where the stimulus packages only resulted in credit card debt reductions which now brings me to our banks. Well two of them anyway. Where once upon a time (you know the fairy tale) our four banking institutions Westpac, NAB, ANZ and CBA were known as the Four Pillars. Have a look at this to see how the World banking pecking order has changed from 1999 to 2009 (move your mouse at the bottom of the page on each year from 1999 to 2009 and watch the appearances and disappearances.)This is a fascinating report where Westpac and the CBA debut in 2009.

Top 20 Financial Institutions by market capitalisation, $b, 1999 – 2009

Enter Paul Keating, past prime minister. Although I never liked the man, I must admit that he is making plenty of sense. Paul Keating joins the 7.30 Report

Kerry O’Brien “Former Labor prime minister Paul Keating is concerned that as the heat starts to come out of the global financial crisis, the big four banks have corned almost the entire market for new housing loans. Before the crisis, the Commonwealth, Westpac, NAB and the ANZ had just 60 per cent of that market. But new found dominance of the big four is now starting to be reflected in their margins on housing loans.”

Paul Keating “There’s a lot of clever things to do. I mean, here we haven superannuation the third largest pool of savings in the world. $1100 billion, growing at $100 billion a year. These funds could hold Australian AA-house mortgage bonds. No trouble at all. In fact we saw all these dreadful numbers for super, people losing money, but if they had had your or my mortgage they would be getting 6 per cent solid, or 5.5 or 6 per cent.”

Paul Keating “So therefore, we have to work out how much we can have the super funds take the mortgages up. And I think one of the ways that can happen is for the central bank, the Reserve Bank, to trade in housing bonds like it trades in treasury bonds. So it makes a liquid system, a liquid market.”

Paul Keating “And that way … you saw the super funds, they lost enormously on the real estate investment trusts, average losses of 70 per cent. So in property, their portfolios in super were too narrow. If they were widened to take into account the really good mortgages of most Australians – you know, the default rate is .00001 per cent, it’s nothing.”

No doubt Mr Keating read the Bank Mergers Report “The acquisitions of St George Bank by Westpac and Bankwest by the Commonwealth Bank in 2008 increased the market share of the ‘big four’ banks, raising concerns that increasing concentration from bank mergers may be significantly reducing competition in the Australian market for financial services.”

The Housing Industry Association (HIA) survey found that in August, new home sales posted the largest monthly increase in more than three years. Sales of houses were up 11.8 per cent and apartments jumped by 7.5 per cent. It is not just property that is on the run. David Jones this week posted its highest full year profit (on record) up 6.3 per cent.

Interest rates have now bottomed which was clearly identified when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) released this week their Financial Stability Review . “In summary, global financial conditions remain challenging. But, while further setbacks cannot be ruled out, the severe downside risks that loomed six months ago have significantly abated.

Interest rates set to increase and Mosman has just 66 houses advertised on Domain down by approximately 300 per cent this time last year. So if interest rates increase why increase the stimulus further? Humming to the song “I see red, I see red, I see red.”

Whilst on red – have a look at this red hot exclusive release in the Mosman market ESCARPA

Cheers ^__^

For this week’s recorded Mosman real estate, Cremorne real estate, Neutral Bay real estate and Cammeray real estate sales www.rwm.com.au/news/

Follow Me on Twitter