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Message in a bottle

The trend and the message in the changes to home loan rates in the past week have been clear and a little worrisome for borrowers.

As reported rates for terms of 18 months or more have risen, and the rises for three and four-year money have been steep. In many cases more than 50 basis points.

Shorter dated money rates have generally stayed static, however market leader Kiwibank and one of the building societies have cut their floating rates in the past week. (BNZ also made a cut to one of its loan products, Total Money, however Total Money is part of a product which includes some other elements. For this reason I don’t include it as a “standard” rate).

To see how the interest rate curve has steepened check out this graph showing Kiwibank’s new rates versus its earlier ones.

The worry is that short-term rates, while attractively low, aren’t going to stay around these levels forever. At some point they will start rising and when you look at the height of medium and short-term rates these increases could be a significant whack.

Borrowers who currently have their home loans of maturities from floating out to one year, will need to be watching what’s happening closely and reviewing their strategy.

One option to consider is leaping in and fixing some of your loan for a longer term – unfortunately the time to do that has, arguably, passed. While the three-year fixed rate is just below its average for the past five years, longer durations are now above their five-year average.

We will be watching these longer-term rates with interest to see if they have gotten too high. They have increased, mainly, because there are growing signs of economic recovery in offshore markets – particularly the United States.

However, there is no guarantee this pick-up will be a long-term constant trend. Indeed, many economists expect there to be hiccups to the economic recovery along the way. When these come there is a chance funding costs for home loans will drop back.

If this happens they may only be temporary and will give you small windows of opportunity to fix.

However, I wouldn’t bank on it as a strategy.

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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%.

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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.

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