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RBA flags offshore dangers, warns in opposition to easing housing credit score as costs hit document highs

Reserve Bank of Australia Financial Stability Review, October 2025:

  • Domestic financial system resilient, major risks offshore

  • Risks include a pullback in elevated asset prices and stress in sovereign debt markets

  • Highly leveraged trades and growth of the non-bank sector make markets more vulnerable

  • Weakness in China’s property sector has pressured banks there and is likely to persist

  • Australian financial system well placed to weather market shocks and a global downturn

  • Banks are well capitalised, profitable, and hold significant liquid reserves

  • Banks can withstand large losses given the high quantity and quality of capital

  • Banks must maintain strong lending standards; non-bank lenders under close watch

  • Banks should strengthen operational resilience to cyber and geopolitical risks

  • Cash-flow pressures on households have eased with lower rates and inflation

  • Most households are keeping up with mortgage payments and have liquidity and equity buffers

  • Business insolvencies concentrated in construction, hospitality, and retail

  • Supports steady macroprudential policy to contain risks in the housing market

  • Superannuation funds’ FX hedging needs will grow and require careful management

Australia’s central bank warned in its semi-annual Financial Stability Review that the biggest risks to the global financial system stem from abroad, including elevated asset prices, rising sovereign debt levels, and leverage in markets. The RBA also highlighted the ongoing weakness in China’s property sector as a persistent threat.

Domestically, the RBA said the financial system is resilient, with profitable, well-capitalised banks and households aided by lower rates and easing inflation. Most borrowers are keeping up with mortgage payments and have buffers, though the drop in mortgage rates has pushed home prices to record highs, raising bubble concerns.

The report urged banks to bolster resilience to cyber and geopolitical risks and cautioned against loosening lending standards or easing macroprudential limits, particularly around high debt-to-income and investor lending.

At the margin the warnings from the RBA on housing credit are a touch hawkish.

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