After RBA announced that it will be keeping the official cash rate chilled this month, Westpac and Macquarie Bank made out-of-cycle rate movements on their own home-loan offerings.
Macquarie Bank, the fifth largest bank in Australia, raised its existing owner-occupier variable rates by six basis points for principal-and-interest (P&I) loans and 16 basis points for interest-only (IO) loans.
According to The Australian Financial Review, the changes will take effect on 21 Feb and will impact all loan-to-value ratio (LVR) bands. This means that the owner-occupier rate for a P&I loan at a 70% LVR will be 3.81%. On the other hand, IO loans with the same LVR will bear a 4.4% interest rate.
Macquarie also increased the rate of its P&I and IO variable investment loans by 16 basis points across all LVR bands.
The bank also announced a rate cut of 10 to 40 basis points for its four- and five-year fixed-rate home loans, both for owner-occupiers and investors.
Westpac also reduced the interest rates of some of its home-loan offerings.
It slashed the rate of its two-year fixed Premier Advantage Package loan by 10 basis points to 3.79%. For a borrower making P&I repayments on a $600,000 mortgage with a 30-year term, this translates to a monthly saving of roughly $35.
On the other hand, the rate of its Premier Advantage Package five-year fixed loan will increase by 10 basis points to 4.19%.
Westpac's regional subsidiaries including BankSA, St. George Bank, and Bank of Melbourne also made some rate movements on some of their fixed-rate home loan offerings.
Collections: Mortgage News
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