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Sweden Household Debt Biggest Risk to Economy

In 2017 banks had total mortgage lending of around $352 billion.
In 2017 banks had total mortgage lending of around $352 billion.

High levels of household debt are the greatest risk to Sweden’s financial system despite a recent cooling off in the housing market, the central bank said in its semi-annual stability report, published on Wednesday.

House prices have surged for years, but the market has wobbled since autumn last year. The Riksbank said it expected the market to stabilize and debt to rise more moderately in future, but it said that prices could fall further. A further decline in prices could damage the economy, Reuters reported .

 “For a long time, we have had a big problem in dealing with developments in the housing market in a good way,” Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves said.

“There is a risk today in the perspective of the finance sector and that could lead to problems for growth and the economy in general.” Most analysts expect house prices to start recovering this year.

“We have seen a downward trend from September up until a couple months ago for the real estate market and we have probably come down 10%,” SEB CEO Johan Torgeby said. “Now it feels like things have stabilized in the short term. I can’t predict the future, but this is probably quite healthy.”

Banks’ vulnerability to the housing market has increased for decades, Ingves said, with around 80% of lending linked to the property market.

Swedish banks are also closely linked, owning around 16% of each other’s mortgage bonds, and rely heavily on market funding, which could dry up in a crisis. “If something were to happen with market funding, then that could easily lead to big problems,” Ingves said.

Banks had total mortgage lending of around 3.1 trillion Swedish crowns ($352.63 billion) in 2017, compared with Sweden’s gross domestic product of 4.6 trillion.

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