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SBS Bank drops its one year home loan rate by -10 bps to a market-leading 4.19%, raises other 'special rates. Sovereign also raises rates

SBS Bank drops its one year home loan rate by -10 bps to a market-leading 4.19%, raises other 'special rates. Sovereign also raises rates

SBS Bank has changed its home loan rates.

What makes this change interesting is that one change is down.

SBS Bank's one year fixed rate is now 4.19%, down -10 bps, and that makes it the lowest rate on offer for that term in the market today (matching the HSBC Premier carded offer).

And it contrasts with other bank moves for that term which are raising one year rates. For example, ANZ raised its one year rate earlier this week to 4.45%, and the Co-operative Bank did the same, to 4.45%

Other changes were raising its two year 'special' fixed rate by +15 bps to 4.54%, raising its three year 'special' fixed rate by +20 bps to 4.95%, and raising its five year fixed rate 'special' to 5.55%, a +10 bps rise.

SBS Bank's standard residential rates were left unchanged.

These increases are effective Saturday, January 21, 2017.

In wholesale money markets, short end swap rates eased lower since the beginning of 2017. Credit spreads also eased lower for bank's who borrow wholesale.

Today's changes alter who has the leading carded rates for mortgage borrowers. SBS Bank joins HSBC Premier to lead for a one year term, SBS Bank no longer leads for 2 years, and TSB Bank has the market-leading offers for 3 and 5 year terms with HSBC.

We should also note that Soverign has announced it will be raising its floating rate by +15 bps to 5.90%, plus its six month, one year and eighteen month rates each by +10 bps on Wednesday, January 25, 2015. This probably signals similar changes are coming from ASB next week.

See all banks' carded, or advertised, home loan rates here.

A snapshot from the key retail banks is:

below 80% LVR  1 yr  18 mth  2 yrs   3 yrs  4 yrs  5 yrs 
  % % % % % %
4.45 5.05 5.25 5.49 5.70 5.85
ASB 4.49 4.65 4.79 5.09 5.49 5.69
4.49 5.05 4.79 5.09 5.69 5.79
Kiwibank 4.35   4.54 4.95 5.45 5.55
Westpac 4.49 5.05 4.79 5.09 5.69 5.49
             
4.45 4.60 4.75 5.05 5.45 5.55
HSBC 4.19 4.29 4.39 4.69 5.09 5.29
HSBC 4.19 4.45 4.54 4.95 5.29 5.55
4.25 4.45 4.49 4.69 5.10 5.29

In addition to the above table, BNZ has a fixed seven year rate which is 6.15%.

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9 Comments

Amazingly affordable mortgage rates 4.19 just watch the housing market in Auckland come out of its LVR slumber and rocket upwards in February.

Where the heck have those 70,000 plus immigrants been since October?

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Those 70,000 plus immigrants are going to hit the market in February or March!

These Buyers having held back in vain for a price reduction since October are going to create an incredible demand Price Rise explosion never seen before in Auckland.

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Why are you replying to yourself?

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because the rest of us have given up listening to his nonsense

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Which is obvious pump and dump propaganda.

I was looking through the "high end" of the Auckland market with houses with 5+ bedrooms. Of the houses that actually looked lived in a lot had cheap furniture and looked like the whole place was rented out. The construction looks cheap. I'm not sure why people feel rich when the $1-$2m house range seem to be utilised like slums.

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Well done SBS, long term rates are influenced by overseas rates but short term rates (I.e.1 year) are NOT. Other banks increasing 1 year terms is simply gouging borrowers. Stick it to the big banks SBS, well done, I hope many borrowers switch to SBS

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Bait-and-switch!
One year at 4.19% and 29 years at 15% ( you get the idea!).
People should try switching to SBS, or any other lender than their own, and see how easy it is. The first question will be "How much is your primary income" followed by "How much do you want to borrow" and if those two don't give the right debt-to-income answer, then question 3 "How much equity will you be putting into the property" won't even get asked.....

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You mean they ask questions that a responsible lender would ask? So what you're saying is they are less likely to fail during a financial crisis and they don't abuse their customers by lending more money that they could pay back?

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Yes it wouldn't surprise me if the ICBC were the next bank to drop their mortgage rates.

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