REINZ Real Estate magazine - Autumn 2022

Page 14

FEATURE

Changes to the CCCFA On 1 December 2021, changes to the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act 2003 (CCCFA) took effect. The prescriptive regulations set out how a lender verifies whether a loan is suitable for a borrower, and whether a borrower can afford the repayments. Lenders must now show how they came to the decision when calculating each borrower’s affordability and suitability under the new regulations.

These changes tightened the lender’s responsibilities under the CCCFA by increasing the level of investigation a lender must undertake to ensure a loan meets the borrower’s needs, ensure borrowers can afford the loan repayments and that borrowers are making a properly informed decision. The objective of the reform is to protect everyday kiwis from incurring unaffordable debt.

What it means for lenders The new lending requirements are necessary for all types of lenders — banks, payday loan providers and mobile traders. Although lenders are already required to question loan affordability, they will now need to abide by a stricter process involving further information verification and transparency regarding calculation of any fees or charges. Lenders can no longer rely on the fact that information has been provided by the borrower to show that they have made reasonable inquiries about the affordability and suitability of a loan — they will need to scrutinise the information given further. For instance, a lender examining mortgage eligibility will need to follow a process that specifically verifies information that a borrower has provided — such as household expenses and income — and then authenticate these details with supporting evidence. Adjustments will need to be made where necessary, especially where the supporting evidence does not match the expense and income disclosed by the

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The Real Estate Institute of New Zealand

borrower. If a lender has failed to assess this specific information appropriately, they risk harsh penalties that, under the new regulations, have become significantly more severe. Whilst these additional steps give borrowers a few more hurdles to jump over, it does have the underlying aim of safeguarding borrowers from ending up in prohibitively high debt.

What it means for borrowers Buyers looking to secure a loan are now required to provide bank statements or other proof of income, such as payslips. They will also need to be prepared for lenders to make detailed inquiries about their objectives, personal details and requirements to take out the loan. Providing this additional information to supplement the investigations has resulted in loans taking longer to be approved — and many buyers missing out. According to media and anecdotal accounts from REINZ members across the country, whilst the changes were to protect vulnerable borrowers, it has instead prevented many potential buyers who would have previously qualified for loans from getting approval. Unsurprisingly, this is a significant impediment for first home buyers, many of whom were already at a disadvantage due to rising house prices. Within the real estate profession, the legislative changes will affect all home loan applications.


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Articles inside

Balancing privacy rights - with health and safety considerations in the real estate sector

4min
pages 62-63

Progress on Unit Titles (Strengthening Body Corporate Government and other matters Bill)

3min
page 61

Agreement for Sale and Purchase of Real Estate eleventh edition

2min
page 60

REINZ hosts its 2021 Annual General Meeting (AGM) online

4min
pages 58-59

No suprises - why getting to know a property before listing is always worth the time and effort

5min
pages 56-57

Fail to plan and plan to fail - importance of planning for real estate success

6min
pages 54-55

First-time home seller? Make their first one a good one

4min
pages 52-53

Bidding farewell to two influential REINZ Regional Directors

4min
pages 50-51

Connecting through understanding

5min
pages 48-49

Auctions paving the way in the market

5min
pages 46-47

Member relationship management — the good oil

2min
page 45

PropTech — drivers, trends and engagement

8min
pages 42-44

2021 in RPM — a year of Cs

5min
pages 34-35

Ever-increasing value of privacy

3min
page 32

Getting the job done — a hybrid style

5min
pages 30-31

A record year for dairy reinforces confidence in the sector

4min
pages 28-29

Ensuring a positive home-buying experience for new kiwis

5min
pages 26-27

2022 — a year of recovery

5min
pages 24-25

Making homes inclusive for all

5min
pages 22-23

Could 3D printed homes fix our housing shortage?

5min
pages 20-21

The future is green — a sustainability mindset

5min
pages 18-19

Nelson and Tasman - Climbing the ladder of the south

4min
pages 16-17

Changes to the CCCFA

4min
pages 14-15

REINZ Real Estate magazine - Autumn 2022

3min
page 6

INDUSTRY

4min
pages 56-57
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