Homeowners 'unconcerned' over losing home

Homeowners 'unconcerned' over losing home

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Date Published : Friday, February 22, 2008

Three quarters of indebted Australians are unconcerned about the prospect of losing their home, despite concerns over a likely rise in mortgage defaults.

Following recent hikes in interest rates homeowners are facing much larger loan repayments and a further increase, as expected next month, could push them over the edge.

But according to a survey by the debt recovery group Prushka seen by the Australian Associated Press (AAP) only 36 per cent of mortgage holders questioned were worried about repossession.

A more indifferent attitude was adopted by the remaining 64 per cent, even though Prushka found that three quarters of Australians are under more financial stress this month than they were in November.

Prushka chief executive Roger Mendelson said there was no panic amongst homeowners when it comes to debt levels, which suggests that the cost of borrowing needs to be increased further in order to get the message across.

"The switched-on people who read the financial pages are seeing what's happening overseas with the sub-prime crisis, but this is not filtering through to consumers," he told the AAP.

"A further rate rise next month will definitely do the trick," he suggested, claiming that once variable home loans come close to nine per cent homeowners will really start to feel the pinch.

Meanwhile the mortgage lender GE Money has stopped offering 100 per cent mortgages to its customers amid concerns over the number of homeowners failing to meet their repayments.

According to the Herald Sun the company's mortgage insurer forced it to withdraw the loans claiming they represented too much of a risk.

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