About Us  |   Advertise  |   Contact Us  |   Terms & Conditions  |   RSS Feeds Other Sites:   landlords.co.nz
Join our newsletter

Mortgage Rates Newsletter

Daily Weekly

sharemarket

Declaring war

In the past banks competed for your home loan business primarily over the two-year term, occasionally there were skirmishes elsewhere, but now it looks like the battleground is in floating rates.

In the past couple of weeks we have seen a number of lenders chop their variable rates to levels which are now at historical lows.

Home owners and property investors will be pleased, as it is bringing down their interest costs. People rolling off fixed rates onto floating are seeing their interest rates fall from around the 7.50% mark to 6% or less.

No doubt the Reserve Bank is happy too, as there has been a huge amount of criticism that banks hadn’t lowered their floating rates, even though the official cash rate had come down.

It seems pretty clear that the banks were increasing their margins on this business to levels which looked high when compared to recent historical data.

The cuts we have seen in the past fortnight back up this claim about fat margins and may well be seen as an admission from lenders that they were doing very well in this part of their lending book.

The current battle is different from previous ones and fascinating in terms of where lenders are positioning themselves.

First up, not all the banks have included themselves in this fight. In the past week it has been ASB, BNZ and Westpac who have joined in. Our biggest bank, ANZ National, has stayed out of it so far and made no meaningful changes; likewise the normal aggressor, Kiwibank, is sitting quietly at the moment.

With the competition, lenders have changed their position in the market since the start of this year. This table shows that in January BNZ’s standard floating rate was one of the least competitive, now it is one of the better on offer.

Likewise, ASB has changed its position on the league table too.

But to confuse the picture Westpac and BNZ have made their best offers in highly targeted products. Westpac has chosen its Everyday Choices revolving credit loan product as the one which it offers the best rate in.

This move is a little gutsy as many people don’t like or necessarily understand revolving credit (sometimes called line of credit) loans. One of the reasons is that they feel the balance owing can creep up quickly, increasing personal debt levels.

Meanwhile, BNZ has chosen its offset product, TotalMoney, as its lowest priced variable rate loan. Again, offset accounts are not widely used or understood in New Zealand.

Leave a Reply

   
Compare Mortgage Rates
Compare
from
to
for
To graph multiple lenders, hold down Ctrl key while clicking in list box
Include OCR

How to use this

Find a Mortgage Broker
  Add your company
Latest Trends
Future interest rate hikes softened

The Reserve Bank has kept the OCR at 2.50% as expected, but had lowered its forecast track for the 90 day bill rate by around 60 basis points (0.6%) to a peak of 4.30% by the end of next year.

For borrowers that means floating home loans are not forecast to rise as much as previously forecast. In June the expectation was that the rates would rise 2% in the next 12 months: that figure has now been wound back to 1.4%.

MORE »

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.

© Copyright 2012 Tarawera Publishing Limited. All Rights Reserved.