Prime Minister John Howard is playing down reports that banks may increase their rates, affecting all credit including mortgage interest rates, as senior Coalition figures continue to argue against an official interest rate rise next month.
The Reserve Bank board is widely tipped to increase the official interest rate when it meets on Melbourne Cup day.
"A large source of the funds that the banks are talking about, increasing the borrowing rates, come from their depositors," he said.
"Until there's significant increase in the price or the cost of those funds in the hands of the banks, given their profitable profit margins, there isn't a case for them increasing their rates."Source: ABC
Mortgage news and articles from about home loans, real estate mortgage finance and related matters that affect both homeowners, first time home buyers, real estate investors and those looking to get into home ownership.
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Monday, October 22, 2007
Australian Share index falls on persistent US credit fears
The Australian share market fell by its largest amount in two months amid renewed concerns about credit markets.
A warning by equipment company Caterpillar that the housing slump in the US was starting to spread to other parts of the economy saw US shares fall at the end of the week.
The domestic market followed suit this morning, with shares in most sectors losing value.
At 11.30am AEST, the All Ordinaries Index shed almost 2 per cent to 6,591.
Stocks exposed to the US economy suffered the most, with Macquarie Bank falling by about 4 per cent, while James Hardie Industries was down by almost 2.5 per per cent.
The Australian dollar was buying 88.54 US cents at 11.30am AEST.
A warning by equipment company Caterpillar that the housing slump in the US was starting to spread to other parts of the economy saw US shares fall at the end of the week.
The domestic market followed suit this morning, with shares in most sectors losing value.
At 11.30am AEST, the All Ordinaries Index shed almost 2 per cent to 6,591.
Stocks exposed to the US economy suffered the most, with Macquarie Bank falling by about 4 per cent, while James Hardie Industries was down by almost 2.5 per per cent.
The Australian dollar was buying 88.54 US cents at 11.30am AEST.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Queensland housing market on firm foundation
Who says young people are struggling to get their foot in the door of the real estate market?
Buyers, many of them in their 20s, are piling their cash into bricks and mortar, snapping up bargains as quick as they come up for sale.
And here's the reason why. A modest house in Brisbane has grown in value by 513 per cent since it was sold in 1992 for $57,500.
Jack Tsao, 27, bought the Mt Gravatt East investment property last year for $295,000 and will take it to auction next month.
Mr Tsao said his decision to sell follows an extensive six-month renovation on the house, which included painting, the installation of a new kitchen and bathroom and the addition of an extra room on the lower floor.
"I was going to keep it and rent it out," Mr Tsao said. "But then there was a lot of fixing up to do. It was my first experience at renovating."
According to the Real Estate Institute of Queensland the median house price for the suburb is $349,000.
The Courier-Mail has tracked the price growth of the house, at 909 Cavendish Rd, over the last 15 years.
Since 1992 the 625sq m property has been bought and sold four times, gathering a 513 per cent capital gain along the way.
If the price of consumer staples grew at the same rate, Brisbane shoppers would today pay $5.39 for a litre of milk, $7.44 for a loaf of bread, and $3.18 litre for petrol.
Newlyweds Georgina and Neil Mackenzie-Forbes have recently bought a property together for the first time - a New Farm townhouse they will live in but intend to rent out or sell in the future.
Both experienced property investors when they were single, Mr Mackenzie-Forbes, 36, said he and his wife were willing to pay up to $1 million for the right property. They paid $675,000 for their 200sq m house.
"This one was close to the city, and we liked the fact that it didn't need any work - we were able to just move in and enjoy (it)," he said.
Mrs Mackenzie-Forbes, 29, said she intended to keep investing in the property market in the future. "I think there are bargains still to be had, you've just got to get in there," she said. Source: Courier Mail
Buyers, many of them in their 20s, are piling their cash into bricks and mortar, snapping up bargains as quick as they come up for sale.
And here's the reason why. A modest house in Brisbane has grown in value by 513 per cent since it was sold in 1992 for $57,500.
Jack Tsao, 27, bought the Mt Gravatt East investment property last year for $295,000 and will take it to auction next month.
Mr Tsao said his decision to sell follows an extensive six-month renovation on the house, which included painting, the installation of a new kitchen and bathroom and the addition of an extra room on the lower floor.
"I was going to keep it and rent it out," Mr Tsao said. "But then there was a lot of fixing up to do. It was my first experience at renovating."
According to the Real Estate Institute of Queensland the median house price for the suburb is $349,000.
The Courier-Mail has tracked the price growth of the house, at 909 Cavendish Rd, over the last 15 years.
Since 1992 the 625sq m property has been bought and sold four times, gathering a 513 per cent capital gain along the way.
If the price of consumer staples grew at the same rate, Brisbane shoppers would today pay $5.39 for a litre of milk, $7.44 for a loaf of bread, and $3.18 litre for petrol.
Newlyweds Georgina and Neil Mackenzie-Forbes have recently bought a property together for the first time - a New Farm townhouse they will live in but intend to rent out or sell in the future.
Both experienced property investors when they were single, Mr Mackenzie-Forbes, 36, said he and his wife were willing to pay up to $1 million for the right property. They paid $675,000 for their 200sq m house.
"This one was close to the city, and we liked the fact that it didn't need any work - we were able to just move in and enjoy (it)," he said.
Mrs Mackenzie-Forbes, 29, said she intended to keep investing in the property market in the future. "I think there are bargains still to be had, you've just got to get in there," she said. Source: Courier Mail
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
BankWest in national expansion on the east coast of Australia
Bank of Scotland backed BankWest says it plans to open 40 to 50 new branches over the course of calendar 2008 on the east coast after opening its first New South Wales branch today.
BankWest also said that it had no "specific plans for RAMS", dousing speculation it would consider making a rival bid for the non-bank lenders' franchise network.
"We do keep an eye on things, but at the moment we've got no plans and we're very excited about our organic (growth) opportunities," Bankwest retail chief executive Ian Corfield said.
Mr Corfield was speaking today at the launch of the first branch opening in Bankwest's 160-branch east coast expansion strategy in Parramatta.
BankWest announced today it would open another seven stores in New South Wales by the end of the calendar year.
Mr Corfield said the bank planned to have another 40 or 50 opened by the end of calendar 2008, with the first Victorian branch to be opened in the first quarter and the first Queensland branch to be opened in the middle of the year. Source: AAP
BankWest also said that it had no "specific plans for RAMS", dousing speculation it would consider making a rival bid for the non-bank lenders' franchise network.
"We do keep an eye on things, but at the moment we've got no plans and we're very excited about our organic (growth) opportunities," Bankwest retail chief executive Ian Corfield said.
Mr Corfield was speaking today at the launch of the first branch opening in Bankwest's 160-branch east coast expansion strategy in Parramatta.
BankWest announced today it would open another seven stores in New South Wales by the end of the calendar year.
Mr Corfield said the bank planned to have another 40 or 50 opened by the end of calendar 2008, with the first Victorian branch to be opened in the first quarter and the first Queensland branch to be opened in the middle of the year. Source: AAP
Mortgage lender Northern Rock gets a breath of life as the Bank of England gives new aid package.
The Bank of England threw a fresh lifeline to English mortgage lender Northern Rock overnight, offering to guarantee new retail deposits and extend funding arrangements to give the bank time to salvage something from its battered business.
The latest aid package came as the country's financial services watchdog said Northern Rock may not have needed to draw on emergency funds from the Bank of England (BoE) at all if its rescue had not been conducted in the full public glare.
Northern Rock, which saw a run on deposits last month after it was forced by the global credit crunch to seek an emergency funding line from the BoE, said the new package would cost it STG40 million ($A91.21 million) to STG50 million ($A114.01 million) this year -- around 10 per cent of its targeted 2007 profit.
But the bank said the new help would buy it time to assess its full range of options, which include being taken over as a whole, being broken up or even attempting to remain independent on a smaller scale -- an option largely discounted previously.
The review process should be completed by February, it said.
Analysts said the new arrangements could help to reassure prospective buyers and allay fears of shareholders and bondholders of a firesale of assets.
But the arrangements are also controversial, as the decision to guarantee new retail deposits could potentially give Northern Rock an advantage over competitors.
"If my mother were to ask me where she should put her money at the moment, I would say Northern Rock," Numis Securities analyst James Hamilton said.
"What (prospective) buyers will want to know, is how long these arrangements will last and whether they will continue (after a deal)."
Northern Rock said the arrangements would remain in place "during the current instability in the financial markets" and that it would "pay an appropriate fee ... to ensure that it does not receive a commercial advantage".
Paying a commercial rate should help ease concerns the move could be found to count as undue state aid. The EU Commission said Tuesday it would form an opinion once it had full details.
The government had previously agreed to guarantee retail deposits made with Northern Rock before Sept. 19 -- the day after its initial pledge -- but said moving beyond that would be unfair.
It said on Tuesday, however, that it would extend the guarantee to all new deposits "during the current instability in financial markets".
It also said it would offer additional funding from the BoE on more flexible terms, which will allow Northern Rock to also use commercial lending as and when it can.
News of the agreement lifted Northern Rock's shares, down almost 70 per cent since the crisis began in mid-September. The stock ended the day up 19.9 per cent at 206.75 pence.
Source: Reuters
The latest aid package came as the country's financial services watchdog said Northern Rock may not have needed to draw on emergency funds from the Bank of England (BoE) at all if its rescue had not been conducted in the full public glare.
Northern Rock, which saw a run on deposits last month after it was forced by the global credit crunch to seek an emergency funding line from the BoE, said the new package would cost it STG40 million ($A91.21 million) to STG50 million ($A114.01 million) this year -- around 10 per cent of its targeted 2007 profit.
But the bank said the new help would buy it time to assess its full range of options, which include being taken over as a whole, being broken up or even attempting to remain independent on a smaller scale -- an option largely discounted previously.
The review process should be completed by February, it said.
Analysts said the new arrangements could help to reassure prospective buyers and allay fears of shareholders and bondholders of a firesale of assets.
But the arrangements are also controversial, as the decision to guarantee new retail deposits could potentially give Northern Rock an advantage over competitors.
"If my mother were to ask me where she should put her money at the moment, I would say Northern Rock," Numis Securities analyst James Hamilton said.
"What (prospective) buyers will want to know, is how long these arrangements will last and whether they will continue (after a deal)."
Northern Rock said the arrangements would remain in place "during the current instability in the financial markets" and that it would "pay an appropriate fee ... to ensure that it does not receive a commercial advantage".
Paying a commercial rate should help ease concerns the move could be found to count as undue state aid. The EU Commission said Tuesday it would form an opinion once it had full details.
The government had previously agreed to guarantee retail deposits made with Northern Rock before Sept. 19 -- the day after its initial pledge -- but said moving beyond that would be unfair.
It said on Tuesday, however, that it would extend the guarantee to all new deposits "during the current instability in financial markets".
It also said it would offer additional funding from the BoE on more flexible terms, which will allow Northern Rock to also use commercial lending as and when it can.
News of the agreement lifted Northern Rock's shares, down almost 70 per cent since the crisis began in mid-September. The stock ended the day up 19.9 per cent at 206.75 pence.
Source: Reuters
Monday, October 08, 2007
RAMS investors unhappy after market slaughter of mortgage lender
RAMS Home Loans has disappointed investors with its first profit announcement since floating the Mortgage lender on the stock exchange last month.
It has reported a bottom line profit of just over $15 million.
The company says the results are in line in with its prospectus forecast, but its share price has dropped nine cents to $1.07.
The share price hit a low of 55.5 cents earlier this month after RAMS revealed that US credit market problems had forced it to access more expensive interim funding for $6 billion worth of its loan book.
The company says it will not know the full extent of the impact on its 2008 results until refinancing has been locked in.
Source: ABC
It has reported a bottom line profit of just over $15 million.
The company says the results are in line in with its prospectus forecast, but its share price has dropped nine cents to $1.07.
The share price hit a low of 55.5 cents earlier this month after RAMS revealed that US credit market problems had forced it to access more expensive interim funding for $6 billion worth of its loan book.
The company says it will not know the full extent of the impact on its 2008 results until refinancing has been locked in.
Source: ABC
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