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

Jasper and Nadia are facing massive increases in their mortgage repayments later this year, but they consider themselves among the lucky ones.

The couple bought a two-bedroom villa in Sydney’s south-west for $660,000 at the end of 2020.

They took out what might by Sydney standards be considered a modest loan, borrowing $528,000 at low fixed rates which begin expiring in November.

Their repayments will jump by at least 50 per cent over the next few years when their fixed rates start expiring and they revert to a higher variable rate.

Like 880,000 other Australians coming off fixed rates this year, Jasper and Nadia are bracing for the impact of the 10 increases to rates the Reserve Bank has made since May last year.

This pain, already being felt by borrowers with variable-rate mortgages, will be exacerbated if the central bank hikes rates for an 11th time at its meeting on Tuesday.

If interest rates are increased by 0.25 of a percentage point this week, it will mean a borrower who fixed their $500,000 loan in mid-2021will see their monthly repayments jump from $2,105 to $3,469 if they go variable in July, according to Rate City — a 65 per cent increase.

While Nadia and Jasper face a similar burden, they say their situation would have been far worse if they had listened to the Commonwealth Bank, which they say was encouraging them to borrow more than $800,000.

Jasper says the bank gave them a “sales pitch”.

 “What we got was a narrative that was painted as you should take as much money as you really can and find the best, highest-price property that you could,” he says.

They say a bank staff member told them that “they’d bought an apartment [at] as high a price as they could, and then they’d used the equity in that to get their second home and then develop their property portfolio from there.”

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