Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Mortgage Reset Aims To Reopen Middle-Class Lending


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil will unveil a new housing-credit framework on Friday, October 10, in São Paulo, with President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva present.

The plan's core promise is simple: make mortgages attainable again for middle-income families who have been squeezed between subsidized programs and expensive market-rate loans.

The mechanics are technical but the logic is clear. Participating banks would see a five-point cut in the compulsory reserves they hold on savings deposits-from 20% to 15%-freeing money to lend.

For every 1 real granted in a home loan, a bank could use an equivalent slice of its savings pool for other lending for up to five years. That flexibility lets lenders earn higher returns elsewhere and use those gains to keep mortgage rates down.

For borrowers, two changes stand out. First, the ceiling for properties eligible for the regulated Housing Finance System (SFH) rises from R$1.5 million ($283,019) to about R$2 million ($377,358), pulling more urban homes under the capped-rate umbrella.



Second, 80% of the newly freed resources must go to SFH loans (capped at 12% per year), with the remaining 20% flowing to the open-market Real Estate Finance System (SFI).
New Mortgage Model Aims to Revive Middle-Class Housing
The government says it will unlock about R$20 billion ($3,773,585,000) immediately, with potential to reach R$37.5 billion ($7,075,472,000) as the system ramps up.

The target is the broad middle: families who don't qualify for Minha Casa, Minha Vida but can't shoulder today's market rates. Behind the story is a funding problem years in the making.

Mortgages in Brazil rely heavily on savings deposits-once a cheap, steady source. As rates stayed high and households chased better yields, banks' low-cost funding grew tighter.

The new model tries to square that circle: reward banks for growing home lending while giving them room to earn elsewhere. A phased rollout-tests through 2026, full operation in 2027-is meant to avoid jolting funding markets.

What to watch now is execution: how many banks sign on, how much of the funding relief reaches borrowers, and whether cheaper, more predictable credit revives construction and resale activity without stoking excess price gains.

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