Previous Years: | Quarterly: | |||||||||||||
Jun 2012 | Jun 2013 | Sep 2013 | Dec 2013 | Mar 2014 | Jun 2014 | |||||||||
D1 Funding | ||||||||||||||
D1.1 Agriculture | 8 | 7 | 15 | 17 | 19 | 21 | ||||||||
D1.16 Finance | 1,433 | 1,564 | 1,629 | 1,683 | 1,733 | 1,682 | ||||||||
D1.19 Property and business services | 81 | 56 | 55 | 52 | 50 | 39 | ||||||||
D1.20 Government administration and defence | 1,226 | 1,022 | 1,025 | 1,023 | 1,022 | 1,022 | ||||||||
D1.27 Household | 1 | 4,839 | 3,338 | 3,329 | 3,342 | 3,327 | 3,334 | |||||||
D1.28 Non-residents | 3,479 | 3,271 | 3,207 | 3,229 | 2,995 | 2,950 | ||||||||
D1.29 Unallocated | 521 | 555 | 581 | 584 | 841 | 806 | ||||||||
D1.30 Total | 11,586 | 9,812 | 9,840 | 9,928 | 9,987 | 9,855 | ||||||||
D2 Claims | ||||||||||||||
D2.1 Agriculture | 1 | 694 | 175 | 187 | 196 | 189 | 185 | |||||||
D2.16 Finance - excluding registered banks | 216 | 159 | 162 | 161 | 156 | 120 | ||||||||
D2.17 Finance - registered banks | 959 | 704 | 729 | 751 | 722 | 653 | ||||||||
D2.19 Property and business services | 1,861 | 1,491 | 1,503 | 1,499 | 1,525 | 1,515 | ||||||||
D2.20 Local Authorities | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | ||||||||
D2.25 Household - housing | 996 | 759 | 756 | 776 | 788 | 830 | ||||||||
D2.26 Household - consumer | 3,162 | 3,141 | 3,167 | 3,237 | 3,253 | 3,250 | ||||||||
D2.28 Non-residents | 75 | 87 | 88 | 74 | 63 | 55 | ||||||||
D2.29 All other business | 3,573 | 3,100 | 3,111 | 3,074 | 3,178 | 3,239 | ||||||||
D2.30 Total | 11,536 | 9,619 | 9,707 | 9,770 | 9,877 | 9,850 | ||||||||
Securitised assets administered | ||||||||||||||
CC1.12 Household - consumer | 1,100 | 894 | 891 | 918 | 919 | 928 | ||||||||
E8.10 Household - housing | 1,659 | 1,106 | 1,057 | 1,019 | 1,011 | 892 | ||||||||
Total sector lending | ||||||||||||||
Agriculture | 1 | 694 | 175 | 187 | 196 | 189 | 185 | |||||||
Business | 1 | 5,433 | 4,590 | 4,614 | 4,572 | 4,703 | 4,754 | |||||||
Housing | 1 | 2,655 | 1,865 | 1,813 | 1,795 | 1,799 | 1,721 | |||||||
Consumer | 1 | 4,262 | 4,035 | 4,057 | 4,155 | 4,172 | 4,178 | |||||||
1 | A list of series breaks for Household Funding and Sector Lending are available in the background notes | |||||||||||||
Last updated 31 July 2014 |
||||||||||||||
Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand |
The Data: Coverage, Periodicity, and Timeliness |
|
Coverage characteristics |
Since December 2004, the Bank has conducted a quarterly survey of non-bank financial institutions (NBLIs). NBLIs are financial institutions with total assets of $5m or more at the consolidated group level, whose principal business is credit provision and borrowing money from the public and/or other sources. Data is sourced from the Non-Bank Standard Statistical Return (SSR). The SSR obtains balance sheet data from NBLIs using the same template as for registered banks, with lesser completion requirements. Figures are aggregates of each data cell of the actual survey templates. Data are in millions of New Zealand dollars and are collected as at the last business day of the quarter. The NBLI SSR does not include group investment funds, unit trusts and various fund managers, friendly societies and life insurance-related intermediaries. This class of NBLI is included in the Bank’s quarterly and annual managed funds survey. The assets and liabilities summary present a summarised balance sheet, excluding securitised loan assets and counterpart funding. Funding and claims are broken down by maturity or sector. Balance sheet figures reported by the surveyed financial institutions conform to generally accepted accounting practice adopted by the institutions. In particular, values may be at book or ‘marked to market’ according to appropriate practice for the instruments involved. Where possible the resident/non-resident distinction in these tables is based on the geographical location of respondents and counterpart transactions. To facilitate statistical reporting however, the New Zealand income tax rules on residency are accepted as an approximation, and are the predominant definition. |
Quarterly, as at the last business day. |
|
Timeliness |
On or before the last business day of the month after the end of the reference quarter. |
Access by the public |
|
Statistics release calendar |
The “Statistics Release Calendar” is updated and released on the last working day of the month. This is a long-term plan of scheduled releases. |
Integrity |
|
Dissemination of terms and conditions under which official statistics are produced, including confidentiality of individual responses |
Data are collected under Section 36 of The Reserve Bank of New Zealand Act 1989 (The Act). The Reserve Bank of New Zealand publishes only aggregated data. Individual institutional data is confidential. |
Provision of information about revisions and advance notice of major changes in methodology |
Provisional data are italicised. Data are deemed provisional when a series is under review. New data, or revised data, are in bold font. Revisions are generally published when the table is next due to be updated and released. Should revisions need to be made more promptly, a note is posted on the website as a ‘special note’. Any major changes in methodology are posted on the website as a special note. |
Quality |
|
Dissemination of documentation on methodology and sources used in preparing statistics |
An Excel Template is completed and returned each quarter by NBLIs. |
Dissemination of statistics that support statistical cross-check and provide assurance of reasonableness |
Deposit-taking finance companies and savings institutions provide prospectus disclosure annually, in addition to statutory reports, which enable checks for reasonableness.
|
Series breaks occur when NBLI data are affected by survey changes that are not 'organic' but arise from one period to another because of factors such as the sale of assets; merger with another institution or a change in substance in business practice that interrupts a 'like for like' time series comparison.
Series breaks for key balance sheet components for all non-bank lending institutions are displayed in the table below.
Series breaks last updated: 31 January 2013
All non-bank lending institutions (NBLIs) |
|||||||
Series breaks |
Loans |
Less: Counter-part funding |
Total Assets (A15) |
Memo: House-hold Deposits |
|||
Break date |
Table C5 |
Table C6 |
|||||
Agriculture |
Business |
Housing |
Consumer |
||||
Dec.12 |
-519 |
-891 |
-279 |
-375 |
|
-2,343 |
-1,482 |
Dec.11 |
|
|
-1,082 |
-114 |
-170 |
-1,290 |
-1,177 |
Dec.10 |
-6 |
|
-117 |
|
|
-143 |
-123 |
Dec. 09 |
|
-175 |
-144 |
|
-144 |
-175 |
|
Jun. 09 |
|
718 |
|
|
|
1,158 |
|
Dec. 08 |
-400 |
-328 |
-1,631 |
-104 |
-301 |
-2,323 |
-1,859 |
Sept. 06 |
|
|
|
|
|
-555 |
|
Under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), securitised assets form part of NBLI balance sheets. However, securitised household loans are not included in total assets in the NBLI SSR, nor is the counterpart funding included in liabilities (in table T1).
To calculate the total asset and liabilities of NBLIs the counterpart funding (CC1.12 and E8.10 in table T4) must be added to total liabilities (A6 in table T1) and total assets (A15 in table T1). Note that securitised business loans and their corresponding liabilities on the other hand are included in table T1.
Latest update: June 2013
D1 is a sectoral breakdown of A1.5, NZD funding in table T1, and D2 is a sectoral breakdown of A10.7, NZD claims in table T1.
The sectors are defined by the ANZSIC code. The sectors defined here represent a two digit classification, with the addition of household and non-resident sectors (not in the ANZSIC code).
The ANZSIC code is allocated to institutions on the basis of the activity in which a majority of full-time equivalent employees are engaged. It is the activity of the customer, not purpose of the loan that drives classification. For example, a company whose principal business is timber milling, but has a trucking division and borrows to buy trucks, should still have the truck loan entered against its timber milling ANZSIC number, 2311, because this is a customer classification.
This sector includes deposits from, and loans to, ‘financial institutions’.
The exception is paper bought that represents a secondary claim on the household sector. Non-bank lending institutions may buy paper such as mortgage backed securities and short-term asset-backed paper for consumer durables issued by other primary lenders. We do not want this paper classified in D2.25 or D2.26, but want it to remain in Finance, along with loans to and claims on financial institutions excluding registered banks
This sector includes all residential mortgage loans to personal customers. ‘Lifestyle’ loans on farmlets are classified housing or farming according to the category used by non-bank lending institution. It excludes business lending secured on a residential property.
This sector includes loans, whether or not secured by mortgage, which have been separately identified as being for personal customers, but are not housing – e.g. boat or car purchase, travel etc., and all credit card lending.
A non-resident withholding tax (NRWT) ‘flag’ is used to non-residents. The tax definition is used for convenience - it is not ideal for monetary policy data. The ideal relates to the location of the customer, to accord with international conventions used for balance of payments and other cross-border data collection purposes. Therefore, entities that are clearly located overseas, (but are classed as New Zealand residents for tax purposes), are treated as non-residents if their transactions are usually separately identified as ‘non-resident’. Companies incorporated in New Zealand are regarded as New Zealand residents.
These totals are the same as A1.3 for funding and A10.5 for claims in table T1.
Notes
Invdividual figures may not sum to the totals due to rounding
Percentage changes are calculated on unrounded numbers
You are free to copy, distribute and adapt these statistics subject to the conditions listed on our copyright page.