Archive for December, 2008
More than 40,000 unlucky people have been caught out in a fixed mortgage rate trap, having taken out their loan at the highest fixed interest rates in a decade, denied any saving from the recent cuts and confronting costly break fees if they decide to refinance.
Figures from the Bureau of Statistics show 43,632 borrowers signed on to new fixed home loans between March and September, when lending rates were at a decade high. The official cash rate has since fallen by a full 3 percentage points.
According to the research group Infochoice, someone who took out a fixed loan of $500,000 in March would now be paying $800 more a month than if they had opted for a variable rate.
But borrowers looking to refinance face a difficult choice: continue to pay a higher interest rate, or incur thousands of dollars in penalty fees for breaking their fixed contract.
"It’s not just all about the rate," the head of Infochoice, Shaun Cornelius, said. "There are all sorts of conditions attached to the exit fees. They can be quite expensive."
While fees vary, borrowers who cancel their loan within the fixed period are typically forced to compensate their lender for the "economic cost" of breaking their contract. This is the difference between the interest the borrower would have paid the lender and the prevailing interest rate. As interest rates fall, this gap is becoming ever wider, meaning it may already be too late for fixed borrowers to save by refinancing.
On top of the economic cost fee, all four major banks also charge an upfront fee, ranging between $300 from ANZ and $900 from NAB, for breaking a fixed loan. Administrative and establishment fees are also charged by the new lender.
Read the full article from Jessica Irvine and Ehssan Veiszadeh of the Sydney Morning Herald here:
Paul Castran
This week’s interest rate cut is expected to lead to an investor resurgence.
With the arrival of spring, they started emerging from their winter bunkers, scouring every neighbourhood, on the prowl for the easy kill. As December broke and interest rates fell again this week, they became bolder and began pacing, waiting and watching for their weakened prey.
And now, finally, they’ve begun to pounce. "Yes, at last we’re seeing evidence of investors returning to the apartments market," says John Edwards, managing director of residential property researchers Residex. "There’s real activity now from the investment community and we’re predicting we’ll soon see that translated into a lot more sales."
The latest rate drop in the cash rate this week, a further 1 percentage point to 4.25 per cent, is expected to further lure the investment hunters. "It will have an effect over time, especially if the rates stay permanently down," says Australian Property Monitors’ senior economist Liam O’Hara.
It’s amazing to see them stalk in terrain that otherwise looks so parched and barren but the experts are adamant: with falling interest rates, rising rents and the continuing sharemarket volatility, the conditions are perfect for the lean and mean to make an absolute killing.
Read the full article from Susan Wellings of the Sydney Morning Herald here:
Paul Castran
Many mortgage holders may be "oblivious" to the fact they have to ask their bank for an upfront interest rate saving, according to consumer group Choice.
When interest rates go up, banks automatically reset repayment levels higher. But when rates come down, borrowers need to contact their bank to instruct them to reduce repayments.
"You have to notify them for the [repayment] rates to fall, otherwise they keep charging it at the old rate," a spokesman for Choice, Christopher Zinn, said.
Read the full article from Jessica Irvine of the Herald Sun here:
Paul Castran
