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Mortgages

Mortgage Rates Daily Commentary
Thursday 2 May 2024  Add your comment
BNZ's new lending dipped; Mortgage arrears up and still rising slowly

Mortgage advisers accounted for slightly less of Bank of New Zealand's new mortgages in the six months ended March compared with the previous September half year , but adviser share of the overall portfolio continues to grow. [READ ON]

Mortgage arrears continue to climb from recent lows and are expected to rise 0.7% by the end of the year, up from 0.5%, the Reserve Bank’s latest Financial Stability Report shows. [Find out]

 

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Rises, rises all around

Weekly Home Loan report: Home owners or people about to sign up to a mortgage to buy a property don’t have many good interest rate choices in front of them at the moment.

Tuesday, June 12th 2007, 9:33AM

by Philip Macalister

The Reserve Bank’s surprise move to increase its official cash rate last week to 8% means that floating and short-term rates are heading higher.

Longer-term rates are being driven upwards too as the wholesale rates (at which banks lend to fund residential mortgages) have been steadily rising over the past couple of weeks.

The outlook isn’t too flash either. Most economists believe that the Reserve Bank will hike the OCR at least one more time and maybe as early as next month.

Added to that the price war amongst lenders appears to be over for now, meaning competition is no longer a borrower’s friend as it has been for the past couple of years.

The difficulty of the situation was perhaps best summed up by this comment from an economist: “Fix last week.”

If you need money, lock in a rate as soon as you can before more increases come through.

What’s making it even harder for borrowers is that there is no real evidence to show how successful the central bank has been at slowing the economy by increasing interest rates.

Another economist summed this up in equally colloquial lingo as the one previously noted when he said we are in the “suck it and see” part of the cycle. The Reserve Bank has done its thing, only time will tell if it works.

Further clouding the picture is the Reserve Bank’s intervention in the currency market early this week. While all the attention has been on what this means for exporters, it also impacts on monetary policy and borrowers.

Since the intervention came as a surprise, a little like the recent OCR increase, economists are being cautious in their assessment on what it means.

Borrowers caught in this seemingly unrelenting upward trend just have to grin and bear the pain. For those taking out new loans the pain is perhaps a little less obvious than for those who are rolling over or refixing existing loans which have been on significantly lower rates than those now being offered.

There is no simple answer to the question what is the best strategy at the moment. One option is to fix for around two-years in anticipation that at the next roll over point rates will be lower.

Another option, for those more convinced that rates will start to fall next year and fall quickly, is to take a shorter-term, one-year fixed rate option.

The key point here is that this is a slightly higher cost option as one year rates for mainstream banks, according to interest rate website www.goodreturns.co.nz, are sitting at 9.30% compared to two-year rates of 9.25%.

Currently floating rates from banks are sitting at 10.30%. Standard two-year rates are 9.25%, while three and five year rates are at 9.15% and 8.95%. There are some cheaper options around from non-bank lenders, however the range of rates is tighter than it has been previously.

To check and compare rates go to the Mortgage Centre at www.goodreturns.co.nz.

« Bollard raises rates and hints at further hikesLoan arrears increase »

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Mortgage Rates Table

Full Rates Table | Compare Rates

Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
AIA - Back My Build 6.19 - - -
AIA - Go Home Loans 8.74 7.24 6.75 6.65
ANZ 8.64 7.84 7.39 7.25
ANZ Blueprint to Build 7.39 - - -
ANZ Good Energy - - - 1.00
ANZ Special - 7.24 6.79 6.65
ASB Bank 8.64 7.24 6.75 6.65
ASB Better Homes Top Up - - - 1.00
Avanti Finance 9.15 - - -
Basecorp Finance 9.60 - - -
Bluestone 9.24 - - -
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
BNZ - Classic - 7.24 6.79 6.65
BNZ - Green Home Loan top-ups - - - 1.00
BNZ - Mortgage One 8.69 - - -
BNZ - Rapid Repay 8.69 - - -
BNZ - Std, FlyBuys 8.69 7.84 7.39 7.25
BNZ - TotalMoney 8.69 - - -
CFML Loans 9.45 - - -
China Construction Bank - 7.09 6.75 6.49
China Construction Bank Special - - - -
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special - 7.04 - -
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 8.40 7.24 6.79 6.65
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
Co-operative Bank - Standard 8.40 7.74 7.29 7.15
Credit Union Auckland 7.70 - - -
First Credit Union Special - 7.45 7.35 -
First Credit Union Standard 8.50 7.99 7.85 -
Heartland Bank - Online 7.99 6.89 6.55 6.35
Heartland Bank - Reverse Mortgage - - - -
Heretaunga Building Society 8.90 7.60 7.40 -
HSBC Premier 8.59 - - -
HSBC Premier LVR > 80% - - - -
HSBC Special - - - -
ICBC 7.85 7.05 6.75 6.59
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
Kainga Ora 8.64 7.79 7.39 7.25
Kainga Ora - First Home Buyer Special - - - -
Kiwibank 8.50 8.25 7.79 7.55
Kiwibank - Offset 8.50 - - -
Kiwibank Special - 7.25 6.79 6.65
Liberty 8.59 8.69 8.79 8.94
Nelson Building Society 9.00 7.75 7.35 -
Pepper Money Advantage 10.49 - - -
Pepper Money Easy 8.69 - - -
Pepper Money Essential 8.29 - - -
Resimac - LVR < 80% 8.84 8.09 7.59 7.29
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
Resimac - LVR < 90% 9.84 9.09 8.59 8.29
Resimac - Specialist Clear (Alt Doc) - - 8.99 -
Resimac - Specialist Clear (Full Doc) - - 9.49 -
SBS Bank 8.74 7.84 7.29 6.59
SBS Bank Special - 7.24 6.69 5.99
SBS Construction lending for FHB - - - -
SBS FirstHome Combo 6.19 6.74 - -
SBS FirstHome Combo - - - -
SBS Unwind reverse equity 9.95 - - -
Select Home Loans 9.24 - - -
TSB Bank 9.44 ▼7.79 7.55 7.45
Lender Flt 1yr 2yr 3yr
TSB Special 8.64 ▼6.99 6.75 6.65
Unity 8.64 6.99 6.79 -
Unity First Home Buyer special - 6.55 6.45 -
Wairarapa Building Society 8.60 6.95 6.85 -
Westpac 8.64 7.89 7.35 7.25
Westpac Choices Everyday 8.74 - - -
Westpac Offset 8.64 - - -
Westpac Special - 7.29 6.75 6.65
Median 8.64 7.27 7.29 6.65

Last updated: 1 May 2024 9:34am

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