April rate hike will put more pressure on borrowers

RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY

MORE than 1.45 million homeowners will be considered “at risk” of mortgage stress if the Reserve Bank of Australia decides to lift rates again at...

Data released yesterday from Roy Morgan showed that there was already 1.23 million mortgage holders – more than one-quarter of all mortgage holders – were at...

This is the highest number of mortgage holders considered at risk since there were nearly 1.3 million at risk in September of 2011, while the proportion of...

The number of Australians at risk of mortgage stress has increased by 514,000 over the last year as the RBA increased interest rates for 10 consecutive monthly meetings....

“If the RBA does raise interest rates again in next week by 0.25% Roy Morgan forecasts that mortgage stress is...

Michele Levine,  Roy Morgan CEO.

White Scribbled Underline

The current overall number remains below the 1.455 million mortgage holders considered at risk during the Global Financial Crisis in early 2009, which...

The number of mortgage holders currently considered “extremely at risk” has now increased to 735,000, or 15.7%, which is significantly above the...

Australian prime and nonconforming mortgage arrears are on the rise, according to S&P Global Ratings, as multiple interest-rate rises...

Instability in financial markets over the past month has tempered expectations for further rate rises, and this week’s official data showed inflation had...

Treasurer Jim Chalmers told question time that while the inflation data “will be volatile month-to-month, but, on the face of it, this is a very...

Economists from Australia’s biggest banks are divided on whether the RBA will hike next week, or hit the pause button.

Two of the big bank economic teams updated their forecasts yesterday on the back inflation figures. Commonwealth Bank now expects a will...

Westpac is predicting a pause on Tuesday. NAB and ANZ are both tipping hikes of 0.25 percentage points.

ANZ is forecasting a cash rate peak of 4.1 per cent, and the other three expecting a peak of 3.85 per cent.

RateCity.com.au research director, Sally Tindall, said the fact that economists were divided on the outcome of Tuesday’s meeting illustrated just...

“The RBA is looking for an opportunity to pause and will therefore be looking for one in the data,” she said.

“One reservation the RBA might have is what message a pause will send to Australian households. The last thing the board wants is for people to think that’s the end of the hikes.”

Given inflation is still elevated – well above the RBA’s target range of 2 to 3% – there is “no way” the RBA would rule out further hikes, Tindall said.

“If the board does decide to pause, it’s likely to come with a caveat that there could still be more hikes ahead,” she said.

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