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Thread: Home loan interest rates creeping up

  1. #1
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    Default Home loan interest rates creeping up

    http://www.straitstimes.com/archive/...eping-20130606

    Home loan interest rates creeping up

    Increase is small so far, but spike feared as global economy improves

    Published on Jun 06, 2013

    By Melissa Tan


    HOME loan interest rates have risen marginally over the past half-year as banks seek to shore up profit margins amid low market rates, industry observers told The Straits Times.

    But although the increase so far has been small, and overall interest rates remain at historical lows, the worry is that market interest rates could shoot up over the coming months in tandem with improving global economic conditions.

    Banks usually peg their mortgage rates to a market rate, which is usually the Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (Sibor), and sometimes the Swap Offer Rate (SOR). They then tack on a premium. Borrowers are typically locked in to these rates for at least three years.

    After factoring in changes to both the market rates and premium rates, overall interest rates have risen by 0.17 to 0.27 percentage point across all banks here since January, said Mr Desmond Chua, head of online home financing service LoanGuru.com.sg

    Mr Alfred Chia, chief executive of financial advisory firm SingCapital, which specialises in mortgage refinancing, said average premiums went up from 0.7 per cent in January to around 0.85 per cent last month. He added that the biggest jump he saw was by more than 0.4 percentage point.

    A 0.4 percentage point jump means that monthly instalments for a $1 million loan on a 20-year tenure could rise by $185 - from about $4,635 to nearly $4,820 - assuming a constant three-month Sibor of 0.38 per cent, and a premium initially set at 0.7 per cent.

    The three-month Sibor began the year at nearly 0.38 per cent, and is now around 0.373 per cent. OCBC economist Selena Ling expects it to rise to 0.39 per cent by the year end.

    Banks are facing lower interest earnings after a raft of government curbs on the property and car markets, in January and February respectively. Industry observers said banks may try to make up for this by raising interest rates.

    Car loan interest rates leapt last month - after curbs in February on car loan amounts - from 1.88 per cent a year to 2.68 per cent across almost all banks here.

    Home owners said their main concern now is whether Sibor rates could suddenly spike due to external factors such as an improvement in the economic situation in the United States.

    "I am worried about whether the Sibor will go up," said education officer Nahar Azmi, 42. He refinanced the mortgage on his District 15 terraced house early this year, with a $881,000 loan on a 25-year tenure. It is pegged to the three-month Sibor with premiums starting at 0.6 per cent.

    The US Federal Reserve may taper its quantitative easing - a technical term for printing money - which would effectively end the ultra-low interest rate environment there. Concerns over this have played out in how the closely watched US Treasury 10-year bond yield shot up to as high as 2.23 per cent late last month, up from about 1.6 per cent as at the end of April.

    But even if the Sibor stays low, market watchers said overall mortgage rates may still rise as banks try to boost profit margins.

    "If the Sibor stays low until US unemployment improves... all the banks here know that to grow margins, they have to increase premiums," Mr Chia said.

    LoanGuru's Mr Chua added that banks have stopped offering mortgages pegged to the one-month Sibor since February this year.

    The one-month Sibor rate has been lower than the three-month Sibor rate for the past year. Both are still near historical lows.

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  2. #2
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    clown who owns a terraced house in d15 worried about his 800k loan house worth 2million worried what
    In the final analysis.....its NOT whether you have a diploma,degree,masters OR PHD....its whether you have a HDB/PC/EC or LANDED...

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  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by newbie11
    Excellent observations. Thanks for sharing.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by newbie11
    Hello newbie

    Not savvy with sibor thingi, but it seems didn't go up much like from the article above?

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    Sibor rate is very much correlated to US short-term interest rates which is more or less determined by US fed fund rates.
    US fed fund rates will remain at close to zero as long as US unemployment is above 6.5% - even US adds 175k jobs every month, it will still take 2015 end to reach goal.
    So Sibor rate should remain low until 2015

    The straits times articles which talks about interest rates creeping is just the premium component in the mortgage rate e.g back in 2009, banks offer 0.65% + Sibor, now if u sign up for mortgage loan today, u should be paying 1.2% + Sibor. But if you signed up back in 2009, you are safe as you lock in the low premium already.

    How bank determine the premium is a black box, but usually when there are too much deposits vs loans, banks will lower premium ( that what happened in 09 crisis when everyone wet their pants and sleep tight by liquidating assets into bank deposits)..

    If QE really tapers off, it will affect the longer tenor interest rates, but not affect the short-term interest rates ie 1mth or 3mth Sibor..

    So I guess this ST article is abit misleading and confusing.....

  7. #7
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    Smile

    Quote Originally Posted by Werther
    Hello newbie

    Not savvy with sibor thingi, but it seems didn't go up much like from the article above?
    what I wanted to highlight

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    [QUOTE=k00L]Sibor rate is very much correlated to US short-term interest rates which is more or less determined by US fed fund rates.
    US fed fund rates will remain at close to zero as long as US unemployment is above 6.5% - even US adds 175k jobs every month, it will still take 2015 end to reach goal.
    So Sibor rate should remain low until 2015

    The straits times articles which talks about interest rates creeping is just the premium component in the mortgage rate e.g back in 2009, banks offer 0.65% + Sibor, now if u sign up for mortgage loan today, u should be paying 1.2% + Sibor. But if you signed up back in 2009, you are safe as you lock in the low premium already.

    How bank determine the premium is a black box, but usually when there are too much deposits vs loans, banks will lower premium ( that what happened in 09 crisis when everyone wet their pants and sleep tight by liquidating assets into bank deposits)..

    If QE really tapers off, it will affect the longer tenor interest rates, but not affect the short-term interest rates ie 1mth or 3mth Sibor..

    So I guess this ST article is abit misleading and confusing.....[/QUOTE
    Think u r referring to sor

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by radha08
    clown who owns a terraced house in d15 worried about his 800k loan house worth 2million worried what
    He did not tell you his cash out.

  10. #10
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    Main stream papers will always have their agendas.

  11. #11
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    I would expect bank spread to stabilise at 1.25%.

    Just hope there is no hyperinflation happening in USA and there will be no spike of sibor rates.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rosy
    I would expect bank spread to stabilise at 1.25%.

    Just hope there is no hyperinflation happening in USA and there will be no spike of sibor rates.
    I think will not have... They are more than capability of controlling this.. They dun even have inflation....

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