Australia bank CEOs call for a fix to housing shortage

Reuters

Published Mar 25, 2024 07:36PM ET

Updated Mar 25, 2024 09:26PM ET

SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia's housing shortage may be driving prices higher but is locking out first-time homeowners and migrants needed to fill skills shortages across the country, the CEOs of Australia's three largest banks said on Tuesday.

After years of ultra-low interest rates pushed home prices higher, Australia faces a long-term drop in the number of younger people buying homes, which could mean more people retiring in weaker financial positions, according to a 2023 government report.

At a banking conference in Sydney, the heads of Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank (OTC:NABZY) and Westpac, Australia's top 3 lenders, blamed a housing supply shortage and urged local governments to speed up planning approvals.

"For the younger cohort, I think it's really a significant problem," CBA CEO Matt Comyn told the AFR Banking Summit, when asked about a housing market with some of the worst affordability in the world by a measure of debt to income.

Westpac CEO Peter King said that prices will go up when you have a supply-constrained market, but that the current home prices "from a societal perspective, it's too expensive".