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New Zealand FTBs might have to wait bit longer for a break

ANZ

ANZ says it expects the OCR to increase 400 percent by the end of 2023

Banks are picking the official cash rate (OCR) to rise over the next few years, potentially pushing up the cost of paying down a mortgage – but first-home buyers (FTBs) hoping for a break might have to wait a bit longer yet.

ANZ, the biggest of the ‘big four’ banks in New Zealand, says it expects the OCR to increase 400 percent – from its present 0.25 percent to 1.25 percent – by the end of 2023. ASB thinks it’ll hit that mark in early 2024.

The Reserve Bank will meet to decide its next move on May 26, after the delivery of this week’s budget.

There is no question that the picture is evolving and that it is getting harder to argue that super-stimulatory monetary policy is the medicine that the economy needs for a prolonged period, said ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner.

Interest rates plunged last year to boost the economy hit by COVID-19 and the subsequent lockdowns, with employment widely tipped to hit double-digits.

Independent economist Cameron Bagrie says it’s a good sign that there’s talk of it rising again.

It’s a sign of success, he told The AM Show on Tuesday. It’s a sign that the Reserve Bank is on track to meet what’s called their remit – full employment. We’ve got unemployment now down to 4.7 percent and it’s dropping. Inflation pressures are moving up. So the economic story here is a good one, a successful one – when you’ve got that economic success story, you don’t need interest rates as low for so long.

The low OCR has been blamed for the sharp increase in house prices over the past year. Like unemployment, predictions of a doomsday scenario were totally wrong. Instead, they went up even faster than before, with the nationwide average (mean) value now above $900,000.

Zollner earlier this month said there would be no fall in house prices until the OCR went up. While this will be good for those looking to buy, current owners will see their costs rise dramatically.

The flipside is that someone pays, said Bagrie. So if ANZ is correct and we get 100 basis points’ worth of OCR increases in the next 30-odd months, you’re going to see the likes of a one-year fixed mortgage rate go from 2.25 to 3.25 percent. That’s still really, low, still really cheap money, but that’s about a 45 percent increase in your interest bill, and that’s not a small number.

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