Australian home loans to investors jump as yields soar amid rental crisis

Australian home loans to property investors jumped for a third-straight month in April, rising at a faster pace than owner-occupiers as surging residential rents make housing an even more attractive investment.

The value of new loans to home investors rose 5.6 per cent to $10.9 billion, to be up 36.1 per cent compared with a year ago, data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed on Thursday.

“Lending to investors continued to rise strongly relative to owner-occupiers, driven by increasing loan sizes,” Mish Tan, head of finance statistics at the ABS, said.

“This likely reflects expectations of higher rental yields and the greater borrowing capacity of investors.”

In original terms, the average size of an investor loan for the purchase of an existing home grew 9.5 per cent since April 2023, from $592,000 to $648,000. In comparison, the average loan size for an owner‑occupier first-homebuyer grew 6.8 per cent, from $498,000 to $532,000 over the same period.

The strongest markets were New South Wales and Queensland where investor lending climbed about 44 per cent and 46 per cent, respectively, since April 2023, the data showed.

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