Parliament's Finance and Expenditure Committee has decided against pursuing an inquiry into retail interest rate margins after National, ACT and Maori Party MPs shot down the proposal.
Wednesday, July 1st 2009, 6:28PM
by Paul McBeth
The committee slammed banks for failing to pass on cuts to the official cash rate to their floating and fixed term mortgage rates last month, and accused of undermining the central bank's efforts to loosen monetary policy. Since then, the government softened its stance on mortgage rates after the major banks defended their positions, and the FEC today backed down on threats to launch an inquiry into banking practices.
"Thousands of New Zealand homeowners, businesses, farmers and exporters have every reason to ask why Parliament's watchdog on the economy is by a majority vote choosing to stay muzzled," said Labour Party finance spokesman David Cunliffe in a statement. "Bizarrely, National, ACT and Maori Party, voted against our committee's inquiry after every indication that this would proceed."
Central bank Governor Alan Bollard held the OCR at a record-low 2.5% last month, and reiterated his concerns over the lack of movement by banks in passing on cuts to interest rates.
The committee also decided by majority against initiating an inquiry into the relationship between the OCR and short-term interest rates. The vote was held after a briefing from the Reserve Bank.
BNZ, ANZ National Bank, ASB Bank and Westpac were unavailable for comment at the time of reporting.
The effect of the Christchurch earthquake has even rattled mortgage rates heralding a turning point to the current trend of a flattening yield curve with floating and short-term rates increasing and long-term fixed rates falling.
Expect from here on to see the graph in front of you flipped, as economists expect the yield curve to steepen. The reason for this is that the 7.1 magnitude earthquake that hit Canterbury and the collapse of South Canterbury Finance last week has eliminated any remaining chance of a September Official Cash Rate (OCR) hike according to economists. Most are now not expecting monetary policy tightening until 2011.
Disclaimer: Every possible effort has been made to keep the information in the rates tables as accurate as possible, however, neither the publishers of Mortgage Rates nor anyone engaged to compile these tables accept any liability for inaccuracies or any loss suffered as a result. It is strongly advised that readers check loan details directly with the provider concerned.