Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Kiwibank raises fixed mortgage rates again

Kiwibank is increasing its fixed mortgage rates for the second time this month.

The move comes after BNZ announced hikes in its fixed mortgage rates yesterday, according to the Good Returns website. Last week ASB and ANZ National moved fixed mortgage rates higher.

Kiwibank is leaving its variable rate unchanged at 5.79 percent but is increasing a range of rates for fixed term mortgages. It also announced a range of rises to fixed rates on October 9.

The latest move is a 36 basis point increase in the one-year rate to 5.95 percent, while the five-year rate moves to 8.69 percent.

The two-year rate moves to 6.95 percent, the three-year rate rises to 7.79 percent and the four-year rate rises to 8.49 percent.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) is expected to hold the official cash rate unchanged at a review next Thursday but wholesale money markets are reflecting an expectation that rates will increase earlier than previously thought.

AMP Capital Investors said yesterday that it expected the official cash rate to rise next March.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has already hiked its official rate once and is expected to keep raising to more normal levels.

Official interest rates were slashed to historic lows around the world to stimulate economies when the global economic crisis was unfolding.

"The market has moved to price in earlier and more aggressive rate hikes from the RBNZ, with close to a 40 percent chance of a 25 basis point hike in December," ANZ said in a commentary yesterday.

Rates in the wholesale money market indicate that interest rates could rise a full 2 percent, or 200 basis points, in the next 12 months, ANZ said.

"Current swap yields have implicitly priced in an early and aggressive tightening cycle from the RBNZ," ANZ said.


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