Australia's leading information resource for the investment professional
 
   Home   |   Blue Book   |   Archives   |   Companies/Funds   |   Careers   |   Subscribe/Advertise   |   Super Review  
Search Site


Blue Book
Funds Management
Superannuation
Master Trusts
Financial Planning
Compliance and Consulting
Custodial Services
Research
Information Technology
Human Resources
Government and Industry
Media and Marketing
Exchanges

News

Mortgage sales defy sceptics for now

Michael Bailey
 
Reports of the property market’s death have been greatly exaggerated, according to a new survey showing a 14.7 per cent rise in mortgage sales across Australia during March compared with February.

The survey is based on the book of Australian Finance Group (AFG), which claims to be Australia’s largest mortgage broker with 7.5 per cent of the national mortgage market (equating to a mortgage book over $20 billion).

While March is always a busy month for new mortgages, AFG points out that the rise in March 2004 was 14.6 per cent over February, roughly equivalent to the latest figure.

Malcolm Watkins, executive director of AFG, said: “Some of the headlines we saw last month would have us believe that the 0.25 per cent rate rise was the end of the world. The more sober reality is that, in historical terms, interest rates are still at the low end, and underlying confidence in property remains strong. Of course it could take more time for the rate rise to feed through, but the initial impact has been only limited.”

The doomsayers have had some effect on borrowers, however. The AFG survey found that 16.9 per cent of new mortgages in March were on a fixed rate basis, compared to just 8.3 per cent seeking such assurance against rate hikes in September 2004.

4 April 2005

print this article...


Related articles by company
• Investors inflate mortgage boom
• Investors inflate mortgage boom
• Trading Places: June 8, 2006
• Platform verdict – advisers want value, not fees

Todays other News
• Peer group comparisons imperfect tool
• Serious negatives in Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac bail-out
• Paying alpha fees for beta performance
• Employers urged to broaden the net
• Retirement villages under ACCC’s watchful eye


Related articles by topic
• Count ups Mortgage Choice stake
• Challenger hurt by markets
• MFAA expels member
• Government must support home mortgages
• Confusion eases mortgage churn


Home |  Advertising |  Disclaimer |  Contact Us |  About Us |  Feedback |  Privacy Policy

Copyright © Reed Business Information. All material on this site is subject to copyright. All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced, translated, transmitted, framed or stored in a retrieval system for public or private use without the written permission of the publisher.

eNewsletter

enter email to register
Resources
In-depth Reports
Industry Links
Diary
Product News
Add this site to My Favourites