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Published byGodfrey Reeves Modified over 9 years ago
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The Real Estate Forum Tuesday, 4 th May 2004 Bucharest
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The Financial Integration of European Real Estate Markets Simon Walley Head of Economic Affairs European Mortgage Federation
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European association founded in 1967 Represents the interests of mortgage lenders Romanian members are National Housing Agency Brings together mortgage lenders from all EU countries and Switzerland Accession countries membership: Czech Rep., Hungary, Malta, Poland & Latvia Represents over 75% of EU mortgage market
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European Integration Background to European Mortgage Markets Measuring Financial Integration What are the benefits for lenders/borrowers? Obstacles to Integration Achieving the single market
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European Integration Background to European Mortgage Markets Measuring Financial Integration What are the benefits for lenders/borrowers? Obstacles to Integration Achieving the single market
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Market trends Outstanding volume of mortgage loans in 2002 exceeded EUR 4.2 trillion Twice the amount of 10 years ago Growing at approx. 8% per year over the last 10 years Around 42% of European GDP
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Mortgages Outstanding - 2002 Source: European Mortgage Federation € Billion
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Mortgage Debt/GDP Ratio -2002 Source: European Mortgage Federation EU 42.6% US 79.6%
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Growth in Mortgages – 1992/02 Source: European Mortgage Federation % Annual Rate of Growth in Mortgage Balances Outstanding EU Average – 8.2%
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European Integration Background to European Mortgage Markets Measuring Financial Integration What are the benefits for lenders/borrowers? Obstacles to Integration Achieving single market
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Measuring Integration Cross-border lending Law of One Price – In an efficient market, assets generating same return should be priced the same regardless of location Level of Industry consolidation
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Cross-border lending? Virtually non existent for residential mortgage markets Mainly limited to holiday homes Some regional initiatives such as UCB in Mediterranean countries or Nordea in Scandinavia Pan-European Internet Banks have largely failed
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Cross Border Commercial Real Estate Investment 2003 Source: DTZ Debenham Tie Leung
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60% of differences in nominal rate are due to underlying product differences Countries with highest nominal rate are not those with the highest adjusted price Average adjusted prices are in a range of 64bp This is less than the variation in prices within many markets Source: Mercer Oliver Wyman Adjusted mortgage rates Range 64 bp Law of One Price - Mortgage Rates
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Market Consolidation - National Source: Mercer Oliver Wyman National Market share of top 5 lenders
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Market Consolidation - International UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain largely domestic banks with no foreign ownership Benelux and Scandinavia more international Central and Eastern European markets dominated by foreign banks – 75% of banks are foreign owned (US and EU) No true European banks at retail level
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European Integration Background to European Mortgage Markets Measuring Financial Integration What are the benefits for lenders/borrowers? Obstacles to Integration Achieving single market
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Benefits of Integration Reductions in cost levels allowing reductions in prices or increase in profitability –Servicing costs –Distribution and origination costs –Funding and risk management costs Market completeness gaps –Gaps relate to high risk mortgages, fixed rate products, indexed and capped adjustable rate mortgages and flexible repayment products –Product gaps often driven by regulation e.g. consumer protection There is still potential for individual markets to become more efficient and complete –Greater integration is one possible driver of benefits –However some benefits can be delivered via domestic change alone
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European Integration Background to European Mortgage Markets Measuring Financial Integration What are the benefits for lenders/borrowers? Obstacles to Integration Achieving single market
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No business case for cross- border lending? Average return on a mortgage loan is low High costs associated with setting up a business in another country (distribution channels, access to borrower information, etc) Market inefficiencies related to loan approval, mortgage registration and repossession lack of market scale, lender size & loan size Cross-subsidisation
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European Integration Background to European Mortgage Markets Measuring Financial Integration What are the benefits for lenders/borrowers? Obstacles to Integration Achieving single market
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Financial Services Action Plan A series of measures agreed at Lisbon summit in 2000 and intended, by 2005, to fill gaps and remove barriers to a Single Market in Financial Services “act as a catalyst for economic growth across all sectors of the economy, boost productivity and provide lower cost and better quality financial products for consumers, and enterprises, in particular SMEs”
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FSAP key objectives A single wholesale market An open and secure retail market State-of-the-art prudential rules and supervision FSAP Measures cover: Securities, Accountancy, Company Law, Insurance, Savings, Payments, Money Laundering, e- Money, Insolvency, Supervision
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FSAP Progress – end 2003 State of play on individual original FSAP measures Proposals to be made: CAD 14 th Company Law Directive Under Negotiation: Revised ISD Transparency Take-over bids 10 th Company Law Directive Completed
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Basel II and CAD III Rules Will have an impact on all credit institution in Europe Will set common capital adequacy standards… … but also encourage standardisation of Risk Management, Supervision, Accounting, Valuation, Disclosure, etc Still a number of questions, including 70 items of national discretion
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6 Key Fundamentals for an efficient, integrated Housing Finance System Sound macro-economic policies Low transaction costs Efficient “primary market” Promote transparent markets Consumer Protection Standardised funding instruments to tap capital markets Conclusions
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