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Weve been saying it consistently quarter after quarter but it still remains the case Australians have never been
wealthier. Assets continue to rise, especially underpinned by higher home prices. And amazingly financial debt
in real terms has recorded the biggest fall on record. Clearly the balance sheets of Aussie households are in
good shape. And higher wealth levels may point to higher spending ahead.
But while wealth is at record highs, companies and super funds still have cash holdings well above long-term
averages. Pension (superannuation) funds hold almost 15 per cent of assets in cash, well above the long-term
average near 9 per cent.
Population growth has continued to slow in fact now growing at the slowest annual pace in nine years. If
population is growing near 1.3 per cent, we will need productivity growth near 1.7 per cent to maintain the speed
Total household wealth (net worth) stood at a record $8,416.8 billion at the end of June 2015, up $225.5 billion
or 2.8 per cent over the quarter. In per capita terms, CommSec estimates that wealth rose to a record $353,881 in
the June quarter, up $8,464 over the quarter.
In real terms, the value of land and dwellings rose by $177 billion in the June quarter offsetting an $86 billion
fall in financial assets. Net saving plus real wealth rose by $132.1 billion in the quarter.
Household financial liabilities fell by $22.4 billion in the June quarter in real terms the biggest decline on
record.
Households held a record $920.0 billion in cash and deposits at the end of June. Cash and deposit holdings
represented 21.8 per cent of financial assets, up from a 6 year low of 21.6 per cent in the March quarter but
below the long-term average of 22.3 per cent.
Pension fund (superannuation fund) assets fell by $27.5 billion to $1,825.8 billion in the June quarter the first
fall in almost four years. Cash and deposits stood at 14.7 per cent of financial assets, still well above the longterm average of 9.5 per cent and up from 14.5 per cent in the March quarter.
Foreign holdings of Australian shares fell by $18.5 billion in the June quarter, down from a record $765.5
billion to $747.0 billion. Foreigners held 46.2 per cent of Australian listed shares at the end of June, up from 44.4
per cent in the March quarter and above the long-term average of 42.5 per cent.
Australian non-financial private companies held $433.3 billion in cash and deposits at the end of June. Cash
and deposits were 40.2 per cent of all financial assets in the quarter, up from 40.1 per cent of financial assets in
the March quarter but above the long-term average is 37.9 per cent.
Population Statistics:
Australias population expanded by 315,952 people over the year to March 2015 to 23,714,272 people. Overall,
Australias population growth rate eased from 1.44 per cent to a 9-year low of 1.35 per cent.
Australias population grew by just 93,942 people over the March quarter the smallest quarterly March quarter
increase for nine years.
A total of 173,000 people migrated to Australia over year to March, the lowest since the year to December 2010.
There were 298,400 babies born in the past year, down from the record 312,200 births in the year to December
2013. But deaths (155,500) were at a record high.
September 24 2015
Over the past year population growth was the strongest in Victoria (1.68 per cent), followed by Western Australia
(1.39 per cent), NSW (1.35 per cent), Queensland (1.30 per cent), the ACT (1.26 per cent), South Australia (0.83
per cent), Tasmania (0.28 per cent) and Northern Territory.
Population growth is above decade averages in just NSW (7.1 per cent above decade averages) Annual
population growth eased in all states except Tasmania and the ACT in the past quarter.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics releases the Financial Accounts publication each quarter. The data covers
assets, liabilities and financial flows for the key sectors of the economy. Figures on financial wealth help reveal
the true state of household finances.
Demographic Statistics are issued by the Bureau of Statistics each quarter. The figures include estimates of
births, deaths, in-bound and out-bound migration movements and estimates of population change by State.
Cash levels remain high. Eventually they will be put to work in high-yielding assets but companies and super
funds dont appear in a rush. However household cash holdings are more normal.
The latest data has few implications for interest rate settings. But if population growth continues to ease, the
Reserve Bank may need to make further adjustments to economic growth assumptions.
High wealth levels provide a solid plank of support for household spending a fact that should hold the economy
in good stead for the next year.
September 24 2015