Homeowners in for mortgage rate shock

Homeowners in for mortgage rate shock

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Date Published : Friday, April 25, 2008

Many homeowners across Australia who are seeing their fixed rate mortgages end this year could be in for a shock, as high interest rates hit them hard, an industry expert has warned.

Throughout the country, mortgage lenders offer fixed rate mortgages for a minimum term of three years.

Those homeoweners who are at the end of their loan term will find the mortgage market to be completely different to the one that they left, property group Raine & Horne claimed.

In March 2005, the Reserve Bank of Australia lifted its interest rates to 5.5 per cent - now the base rate is at 7.25 per cent - which means as many as 30 per cent of mortgage holders could be in for a wake up call during 2008, the Telegraph reports.

Raine & Horne chief executive Angus Raine told the publication: "The Reserve Bank has increased interest rates eight times since 2005, which borrowers who locked into fixed-rate loans have been immune to until now.

"However, 30 per cent of Australians with mortgages will shift from fixed rates of about six per cent to standard variable rates nudging nine per cent."

At the moment, mortgage lenders are offering both fixed and variable rate home loans from between 8.24 per cent and 9.47 per cent, meaning a huge leap in monthly repayments awaits for many property owners.

Earlier this week, it was claimed by economists that another rate hike in May is rated at "fifty-fifty" due to rising inflation.

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