Refinancing smashes the record books as borrowers take the fight to rising rates
In recent years, refinancing has become increasingly popular in Australia as homeowners look for ways to combat rising interest rates.
In fact, recent data from ABS showed that the value of refinanced home loans has hit a new record high, a whopping $19.5 billion worth of mortgages were refinanced in November.
This is the highest monthly amount in Australian history, smashing the previous record set in September 2022 by almost $1 billion.
Ms Sally Tindall, Research Director for RateCity.com.au commented:
“Australians are being anything but complacent when it comes to their home loans.
They’re switching in droves and that’s fantastic to see.
The refinance boom has put Australian banks on notice: shape up or customers will jump ship.
Borrowers who haven’t yet refinanced should use this competition in the market to get themselves a better deal.
With nearly $20 billion worth of mortgages up for grabs each month, it’s no wonder banks are falling over themselves to offer up discounts and cashback perks to customers willing to switch.
The RateCity.com.au database shows there are 34 lenders offering cashback deals to refinancers, while 40 lenders have cut new customer variable rates since the hikes began last May.
Banks need to be on the winning end of any refinancing deal, not the losing end, particularly as the number of new home loans continues to tumble.”
Meanwhile, new home lending continues to dive
On the other hand, the value of new home loans being approved continued to fall in November, dropping by $953 million, or 3.7 per cent compared to the previous month, according to the ABS recently released data.
This is the 10th consecutive month the value of new mortgages has fallen.
Ms Tindall said:
“The 10-month-long drop in new home lending mirrors what’s happening in the property market, where prices continue to tumble across the country.
Rising interest rates have put a giant question mark over people’s property-buying budgets, with many stepping out of the market until they get a clearer idea of where prices will land.
If you buy a new vacuum cleaner or a fridge and then see it selling for fewer days later, you generally kick yourself. The idea of doing that with a home has people sitting on the sidelines.”
First-home buyers continue their retreat
Meanwhile, the number of owner-occupier first-home buyer loans dropped again in November, down 5.5 per cent from the previous month and down 31.3 per cent from the same time a year ago.
Ms Tindall further explained:
“The number of first home buyers has also continued to plummet, down by more than 30 per cent from the same time a year ago.
Falling property prices are likely to tempt many first home buyers into the market over the next 12 months, however, passing the banks’ rigorous serviceability tests will be no mean feat now the cash rate is at a 10-year high and set to keep on rising.”
Proportion of fixed loans lifts but is still very much on the nose
The proportion of new and refinanced loans on a fixed rate clocked in at 5 per cent this month, in dollar terms.
This is up from the previous month when just 4 per cent of loans were fixed, however, it is still dramatically down from the peak last July when 46 per cent of all new and refinanced loans were fixed.
Originally published by Property Update