Rise in variable rate home loans continues

The trend could continue as borrowers "develop apathy" to the RBA cash rate hold

Rise in variable rate home loans continues

News

By Rebecca Pike

New data has shown a 2% increase in borrowers opting for variable rate home loans, as demand for fixed rate loans fell for the 8th month in a row.

According to Mortgage Choice’s latest national home loan approval data, variable rate home loans accounted for over 82% of all home loans written throughout May 2018. This is up over 2% from April and almost 7% higher than the 12-month average.

Susan Mitchell, Mortgage Choice CEO said, “This trend will continue as borrowers develop apathy towards the Reserve Bank of Australia’s stagnant cash rate.

“Indeed, we continue to see borrowers opt for the flexible nature of variable rate home loans which may offer a redraw facility, offset accounts and the ability to make extra repayments. These features are not typically associated with fixed rate loans.

“While a fixed rate product provides repayment certainty, variable home loan rates have been relatively stable for a prolonged period of time giving borrowers little incentive to fix.”

This week’s Housing Finance data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics found that 52,116 home loans were approved throughout April, down 1.4% from the previous month.

Mitchell added, “Unsurprisingly, the value of investment loans dipped somewhat, falling 0.9% to $10.7 billion in April, which could reflect tighter lending standards and serviceability policies. However, May data may show an increase in investment loans following APRA lifting the cap on investor loan growth at the end of April.

“ABS data also shows the value of owner-occupied housing loans in April rose just 0.2% to $20.9billion.

“The data also showed, in original terms, the number of first home buyer commitments as a percentage of total owner-occupied housing finance commitments rose to 17.6% in April 2018 from 13.7% in January 2018.

“This increase is significant and first home buyers seem to be propping up the market.”

Looking ahead, Mitchell said she expected a combination of factors, such as historically low interest rates, easing property prices and access to FHOGs, to maintain home loan demand, whether variable or fixed, but preparation is key.

 

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