Welcome to Finance and Fury
Today we have Jayden with us, and we will be talking about Interest rates. The first Tuesday of every month, the RBA releases the updates on the cash rate.
The markets currently appear to be going down, and the cash rate reflects a negative trend. The markets show that it will gradually reduce from 1.5% to 1.25% in August and in 2020 down to 1%.
Fixed Interest Rates are HUGELY popular right now. And they’re only going to become more popular if interest rates continue to go up.
The question is: How do you know if fixed rates are for you? Or if now is a good time to fix?
Fixed Rate Basics Fixed interest rates (also known as fixed rate home loans) are interest rates that will not change for a period of time, usually between one to five years. Variable rates can move up, and down depending on a range of factors – fixed interest rates remain static, giving you certainty on the repayment of your loan.
Why you might Need Fixed Interest Rates Fixed interest rates are a way to reduce the risk of your loan repayments increasing During the fixed rate period your repayment cannot change for the period set for Regardless of the bank, market or RBA interest rate movements. Great for budgeting future payments
When Fixed Rates might not suit you The flip side is also true, so if interest rates decrease in the market the lower rate is not passed onto you, but that’s just the start. Fixed home loans do come with a few limitations when compared to variable home loans. Australian lenders severely limit how much you can make in additional repayments per year. If you got paid a large bonus, received a tax refund or wanted to make additional repayments over the set ones – you will have to pay a penalty. Penalties – break costs: why would you want to break a loan? Interest rates have come down significantly, sold a property and need to pay back the loan Break Cost = Loan amount prepaid * (Interest Rate Differential) * Remaining Term. $500,000 is fixed for 5 years and then is entirely repaid by the customer with 2.5 years The loan was fixed was 5.50% p.a. - current 2.5-year bank rate 3.50% p.a (2% difference) = $25,000 If you sell the property, you could violate the loan contract and have to pay the break cost Extra repayments limited Depending on the bank or lender, it is possible to pay extra on your fixed rate loan. Amounts – they range from $5-20k p.a. or $30k over the life of the loan No offset accounts - if you have cash saved up, it won't offset interest
Things to consider Economists sometimes don’t get it right, with certainty they will suggest markets will go up, but in our time we have seen this not to be the case a few times It all depends on international markets
A quick word of warning
I’ve said it once, and I’ll say it again – a fixed rate isn’t for everyone.
I fixed my rates a few years ago worrying that interest rates were going to shoot up. And they did, for a few months.
Thank you for listening. If you want to get in contact jump onto the contact page here.
Resources:Resources page – https://financeandfury.com.au/resources/
Bonds and fixed Interest rates – https://financeandfury.com.au/say-what-wednesday-the-skinny-on-bonds-and-fixed-interest/
Property – https://financeandfury.com.au/archive/property/
Interest rates – https://financeandfury.com.au/archive/interest-rates/
Investing in 2019 – https://financeandfury.com.au/archive/investing-in-2019-miniseries/