Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

For most things we buy, the price we are quoted is the price we pay.

That’s supposed to be the case even where taxes and fees are involved. Australian law requires anyone selling anything to display a total price that includes all “taxes, duties and all unavoidable or pre-selected extra fees”.

But our investigations, which compare the interest rate quoted on our mortgages with the fine print in our own mortgage documents, show this is hardly ever the case for home loans.

Even though we are both trained as accountants, until recently we hadn’t bothered to check — even as interest rates climbed. We assumed the rates we were being told we were being charged (say 5 per cent per year) were the rates we were actually paying.

This would be easy enough, and in our view the right thing, for banks to do.

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The price quoted usually isn’t the price paid

Mortgage interest is usually charged monthly, but the rates are yearly. This means that each time interest is charged, the outstanding amount compounds as interest is applied to interest.

That sounds bad enough. But this isn’t our main complaint.

It’s that there are two possible ways to calculate the amount of interest. Banks calculate interest on a daily basis.

The most reasonable would be to calculate the daily amount in a way that adds up to an annual amount that matches what was quoted. That way, a 5 per cent rate would really be 5 per cent.

Although there’s a bit of calculation involved, it’s easy enough for banks to do.

How banks calculate mortgage interest

The other, arguably less reasonable, way is what’s called the “simple” method. Our investigations show that this technique is used by all the big four banks, and probably many others too.

It’s called the simple method because it involves simply dividing the annual rate (say 5 per cent) by 365 to determine the daily rate.

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