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Weekly home loan report: Banks keep chopping down two-year fixed rates
Wednesday 25th of February 2004
The Bank of New Zealand kicked the battle off just over a week ago when it dropped its two-year rate to 6.99% - along with a little trumpet blowing (“BNZ…sets a new market benchmark for two-year rates”).
Others lenders – mainly banks – followed suit with ANZ, ASB and National going to 6.95% (nothing like undercutting the market leader by 0.04%). Bank Direct went a little further to 6.90%, while HSBC and Sovereign (the biggest non-bank lender) dropped their equivalent rates to just 7.15%.
BNZ and HSBC also dropped other fixed rates and Westpac took its hybrid 30-month rate to 7.15%.
However BNZ counter-punched on Friday dropping its two-year rate another 20 basis points to 6.79%.
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Others lenders – mainly banks – followed suit with ANZ, ASB and National going to 6.95% (nothing like undercutting the market leader by 0.04%). Bank Direct went a little further to 6.90%, while HSBC and Sovereign (the biggest non-bank lender) dropped their equivalent rates to just 7.15%.
BNZ and HSBC also dropped other fixed rates and Westpac took its hybrid 30-month rate to 7.15%.
However BNZ counter-punched on Friday dropping its two-year rate another 20 basis points to 6.79%.
Read More - Opens in a new window
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