Singapore financial vulnerability climbs, but still resilient to shocks - MAS

Reuters

Published Nov 25, 2022 12:02AM ET

Updated Nov 25, 2022 01:07AM ET

By Xinghui Kok

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singaporean households, corporates and banks have seen an increase in financial vulnerability this year, the city-state's central bank said on Friday, warning people to be prudent about taking on more mortgage debt.

The higher vulnerability was mostly due to the unwinding of pandemic-related precautionary buffers, the Monetary Authority of Singapore said in its annual financial stability review.

However, the central bank's stress test showed corporates and households were "resilient to macrofinancial shocks", while banks hold strong capital positions.

The central bank noted, however, that households - especially those in lower-income groups - should be prudent when committing to mortgage loans, given financial conditions were expected to tighten further in coming quarters.

It said housing loans remained the key driver of a rise in household debt, contributing 2.7 percentage points to the overall 3.1% year-on-year growth in the third quarter of 2022.

The silver lining was that the credit quality of housing loans had improved over the past year after tighter rules were introduced in December last year.

Loan-to-value ratios have fallen to 43% in the third quarter of 2022 from 54% in 2017, and just 30 units were foreclosed this year.

Globally, the Monetary Authority of Singapore expects growth to slow sharply over the next year with inflation likely to remain "significantly" above the target of many central banks.