Link between mortgage rates changes

Recent changes in mortgage rates mean we could be heading towards a negative yield curve again, possibly by the end of the year.

Wednesday, March 29th 2000, 12:00AM

by Paul McBeth

Recent changes in mortgage rates mean we could be heading towards a negative yield curve again, possibly by the end of the year.

That's when long-term interest rates are below short-term rates, a situation that was last the case some 18 months ago. And if you're a borrower on a floating rate, that means you could be looking longingly at some of the fixed rate terms as your own mortgage costs start heading upwards.

So what's happening to mortgage rates at the moment and what's the outlook?

The result of all that: longer-term rates end up cheaper than short-term and you have a negative yield curve. ASB Bank economist Rozanna Wozniak says that will probably happen at some stage next year, maybe even later this year.

"The flattening yield curve is exactly what you'd expect to see as the Reserve Bank tightens monetary policy. The long rates pre-empt (and we saw that last year), the short ones follow and the whole thing flattens."

For borrowers, she says that's a return to more normal cycles as there have been long periods when fixed rates were cheaper than floating.

"And the further we get in to the environment where lower inflation is entrenched, the width of those cycles is becoming narrower."

She says we should be able to have, on average over a whole cycle, mortgage rates of around eight per cent.

Paul is a staff writer for Good Returns based in Wellington.

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