By Gareth Vaughan
The percentage of New Zealand's NZ$168.2 billion worth of mortgages on floating, or variable, interest rates has popped up above half for the first time since the Reserve Bank started collecting the data on floating versus fixed-term rates in June 1998.
Figures out from the central bank on Friday afternoon show NZ$84.6 billion, or 50.29%, worth of mortgages on floating interest rates and NZ$83 billion, or 49.34%, on fixed-term interest rates. A small sum is recorded as unallocated.
It's both the highest percentage and highest dollar amount floating since Reserve Bank records began 13 years ago and comes at a time when floating rates have been lower than fixed rates for a sustained period of time. The move to just over half mortgages by value being on floating rates compares to a peak of 87% on fixed-term rates as recently as January 2008.
The Reserve Bank last Thursday left the Official Cash Rate (OCR) unchanged at 2.5%, and most economists don't expect the OCR to be increased until early 2012, meaning floating rates are unlikely to rise any time soon.
Of all the major banks only two, Kiwibank and HSBC, advertise a fixed rate that's lower than their floating rate. Kiwibank is currently running a six-month 5.4% "special" rate that is due to expire next Monday. HSBC offers a six-month rate of 5.49%, or 4.99% with insurance, for its Premier customers, and a 5.99% floating rate. HSBC's Premier customers must have mortgages worth NZ$500,000 or savings of NZ$100,000 to qualify for a loan. See all bank mortgage rates here.
Of the NZ$83 billion worth of fixed-term mortgages, more than half - NZ$47.6 billion - is on a term with less than a year to run.
Bottom line boost
Banks do better out of floating mortgages because the margin between the variable rate and short end of the yield curve, such as three month bank bills, is higher than the margin between the swap rate and fixed rate mortgages. Interim results from ANZ, BNZ and Westpac this week should show continued benefit to their bottom lines from mortgage customers switching to floating rates from fixed-term rates.
The Reserve Bank's ability to control consumer spending and inflation through OCR hikes is also boosted by having more people on floating mortgages. Because the OCR's biggest influence is on short term interest rates, a hike or cut in the OCR quickly flows through to floating interest rates. A borrower on a floating mortgage is, for example, generally hit by a 25 basis point hike when the Reserve Bank lifts the OCR by the same amount.
This means the borrower is forced to spend more on interest payments, giving them less discretionary money to spend elsewhere.
Meanwhile, the customer shift to floating from fixed rate mortgages is helping push up margins at the banks. ANZ New Zealand's margins rose 7 basis points in the December quarter and ASB's net interest margin rose 0.4% to 2% at December 31 from 1.6% at December 31, 2009.
Big switch
ANZ said 49% of its NZ$53.9 billion mortgage portfolio was on variable mortgages as of December 31, nearly double the 26% at the end of 2009 and 37% at September 30 last year. And ASB said about half its NZ$37.5 billion worth of home loans were floating at December 31. That's an increase from just 25% within 24 months.
ANZ Group CEO Mike Smith said in February he expected both ANZ and National Bank mortgage customers to continue switching to floating mortgages with ongoing margin benefits for the group.
Kiwibank's December quarter General Disclosure Statement, released in February, showed the value of its floating mortgages almost doubled in the year to December 31, 2010 to NZ$5.5 billion from NZ$2.8 billion a year earlier. Over the same period the value of the bank's fixed-term mortgages dropped by NZ$487.4 million to NZ$4.6 billion. That's a rise to almost 54% of mortgages by value on floating rates from 35% a year earlier.
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10 Comments
Under the current market conditions, floating rates are better for people with mortgages (which I imagine would be the main motivator for the switch) - If banks also benefit from this, as indicated, I'd have liked to see a win-win position for both banks and borrowers put forward here... or have I misunderstood something?
And the profits will go where.....silly question isn't it!
"A German investor group has won approval to extend its purchases of Southland dairy farms, adding two more properties worth a total of $14 million.
Aquila AgrarINVEST, D/S Neuseeland Milchfarm Investitions and Alceda Star have gained clearance from the Overseas Investment Office to take controlling stakes in two limited partnerships that have about 408 hectares of farmland under management.
The German institutions in January were approved to buy 1,302 hectares of property for $37.8m - part of $109.7m in land sales put together by Feilding-based farm syndication and management group AgInvest.
The German group will own 95 per cent of Ota Dairies Limited Partnership and 80 per cent of Scotts Gap Limited Partnership. They won approval from the OIO with the promise of creating new jobs lifting farm production and building new homes and milking sheds on the farms"
Things that float in the night.....!
Look what's taking place across the ditch....
"Bottom line: prepare for an early rate rise and with more to come later in the year. Only GFC-like disasters can "save" you from them".
But not here no way..not while the profit bloated banks are running the show.....come on Bolly...do another jig....we at least get to laugh!
I've proposed that fixed rates are gradually phased-out or RB is given the facility to vary the principle repayment rate of fixed rate loans. (Monies held on account till roll-over; this way protects from market aberrations, but doesn't insulate from the intentions of monetary policy execution.)
If fixed rates had been banned before the start of 2005, say, would:
1) Our housing bubble have been as intense?
2) Individual debt be lower or higher?
3) NZshire's private debt be lower or higher?
4) The OCR be lower or higher?
5) NZD be less/more overvalued?
6) Housing be more/less affordable?
7) Banks foreign funds fraction be lower or higher?
8) NZshire's saving rate be lower or higher?
9) Bank profits have been lower or higher since then?
10) See the dots?
"The Reserve Bank's ability to control consumer spending [and debt backed housing purchases] and inflation through OCR hikes is also boosted by having more people on floating mortgages. Because the OCR's biggest influence is on short term interest rates, a hike or cut in the OCR quickly flows through to floating interest rates. A borrower on a floating mortgage is, for example, generally hit by a 25 basis point hike when the Reserve Bank lifts the OCR by the same amount.
This means the borrower is forced to spend more on interest payments, giving them less discretionary money to spend elsewhere." Or on relatively larger housing loans, that fuel .....
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