Search: SOEs
RBA Glossary definition for SOEs
SOEs – state owned enterprises
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The Global and Macro-financial Environment
22 Mar 2024
FSR
– March 2024
The Global and Macro-financial Environment | Financial Stability Review – March 2024
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2024/mar/the-global-and-macro-financial-environment.html
Overview
10 Mar 2004
FSR
– March 2004
competition for loan origination has been very strong, and some borrowers who previously would not have been able to obtain mortgages can now do so. ... Nominal interest rates in all the key financial centres are at very low levels and have been so over
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2004/mar/overview.html
Box C: Risks in High-density Apartment Markets
12 Apr 2019
FSR
– April 2019
One is that population growth, and so underlying demand for housing, has been strongest in Sydney and Melbourne. ... Most borrowers do not borrow the maximum loan amount available, and so most borrowers would not be constrained by a change in lending
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2019/apr/box-c.html
Box C: Foreign-owned Banks in Australia
10 Mar 2007
FSR
– March 2007
In contrast to the previous period, the foreign-owned banks' share of total domestic lending has increased noticeably over the past decade or so – from around 7 per cent of bank ... This increase in market share partly reflects a renewed focus on
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2007/mar/box-c.html
Box C: Non-conforming Housing Loans
10 Mar 2005
FSR
– March 2005
As the level of credit impairment and loan-to-valuation ratio (LVR) increase, so does the interest rate payable.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2005/mar/box-c.html
Box B: Developments in the Low-doc Loan Market
10 Sep 2005
FSR
– September 2005
This contrasts with some non-bank lenders that also offer low-doc loans to borrowers with impaired credit histories or other high-risk characteristics – types of so-called ‘non conforming’ loans. ... only existed during the past few years of
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2005/sep/box-b.html
Box A: Recent Growth of Small and Medium-sized Chinese Banks
20 Oct 2016
FSR
– October 2016
Larger banks' exposures to smaller banks appear to be relatively small, so direct contagion may not pose a material risk. ... As a result, some small and medium-sized banks will need to raise capital, and some have reportedly already done so.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2016/oct/box-a.html
Household and Business Finances
8 Apr 2022
FSR
– April 2022
Looking further ahead, medium-term systemic risks remain elevated and so it is critical that lending standards remain strong. ... landlords or pose indirect risks by constraining household consumption and so economic activity.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2022/apr/household-business-finances.html
Box D: Stress Testing at the Reserve Bank
20 Oct 2017
FSR
– October 2017
Each bank is assumed to respond to a scenario in uniform, pre-defined ways, so that variation in results across banks only reflects differences in their balance sheet structure, capital and
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2017/oct/box-d.html
Overview
10 Sep 2014
FSR
– September 2014
narrowing. The low interest rate environment and, more recently, strong price competition among lenders have translated into a strong pick-up in growth in lending for investor housing – noticeably more so ... Even so, a broader risk remains that
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/fsr/2014/sep/overview.html