News
Mortgage rates slide despite Bollard move
Monday 1st of November 2004
ANZ Bank fired the latest shot late yesterday, trimming its two-year fixed rates from 7.35 per cent to 7.2 per cent in an effort to grab customers.
One market watcher said yesterday that under 7 per cent looked "a distinct possibility" soon and that the price war could also widen to other rates.
ANZ cut its fixed rate despite Dr Bollard's decision to bump up the official cash rate for the sixth time this year to 6.5 per cent.
That may see banks tweak their floating mortgage rates slightly higher, but few borrowers are taking on floating rates at 8.5 per cent.
Some commentators say about 90 per cent of recent loans are for fixed terms, most for two years, and rates have fallen from as high as 7.75 per cent earlier this month to as low as 7.15 per cent.
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One market watcher said yesterday that under 7 per cent looked "a distinct possibility" soon and that the price war could also widen to other rates.
ANZ cut its fixed rate despite Dr Bollard's decision to bump up the official cash rate for the sixth time this year to 6.5 per cent.
That may see banks tweak their floating mortgage rates slightly higher, but few borrowers are taking on floating rates at 8.5 per cent.
Some commentators say about 90 per cent of recent loans are for fixed terms, most for two years, and rates have fallen from as high as 7.75 per cent earlier this month to as low as 7.15 per cent.
Read More - Opens in a new window
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