Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which dominates the country's
A$2 trillion ($1.4 trillion) mortgage market with a quarter of
all loans, and Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd, the
fourth-largest lender, hiked fixed-rate loans by 1.4 percentage
points and 0.9 percentage points respectively, their
representatives said on Thursday.
Smaller lender HSBC, which has A$28 billion in mortgages, also
raised its fixed-home rate by 1.5 percentage points, said a
spokesperson.
Those increases were separate to raises in variable-rate loans
that followed interest rate hikes by the Reserve Bank of
Australia (RBA) in the past two months, but reflect forecasts of
more RBA tightening ahead, putting property prices into reverse.
"It's a sign of things to come in the variable rate market,"
said Brendan Coates, director of the Economic Policy Program at
the Grattan Institute, a think tank.
"What drove prices higher during Covid was in part the
expectation that interest rates would remain low for longer.
That's the world that's been turned on its head."
Fuelled by ultra-low interest rates and RBA forecasts of holding
off increases until 2024 at the height of the pandemic,
Australian property prices jumped by a quarter in 2021 alone.
But soaring inflation prompted the RBA to tear up that forecast,
and government data due out on Friday is expected to show a
second straight month of house price declines.
When people who took out fixed loans with ultra-low rates have
to refinance, "they are going to be looking at a very different
rate environment, where rates could potentially be more than
double what their previous rate was", said Sally Tindall, head
of research at RateCity, a financial comparison website.
In mid-2021, with ultra-low rates, nearly half of new loans were
fixed. By April 2022, 16% of new loans were fixed, RateCity
says.
A CBA spokesperson said the change in fixed-rate loans was due
to "increases in funding costs and as a result of current market
conditions". Banks typically peg their fixed rates to global
money markets which have seen rates more than triple since the
start of 2022.
($1 = 1.4505 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Byron Kaye with additional reporting by Wayne
Cole; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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