Home loan war hots up

Published Oct 30, 1999

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The next salvo in the battle for your home loan has been fired as home loan

lenders compete for your business by offering lower interest rates.

NBS is the latest bank to offer a cheaper loan, the NBS Superate, at an

interest rate of 13,1 percent a year, well below the current basic home

loan rate of 15,5 percent. This follows on the heels of First National

Bank`s (FNB) recently launched SmartBond at 13,3 percent. SA Home Loans is

also offering loans at 13,3 percent.

The stranglehold over traditional home loans was broken in February when

mortgage origination company SA Home Loans entered the market, offering

loans up to two percent lower than general home loan rates.

SA Home Loans is able to offer these discounted interest rates because it

funds the loans via a process called securitisation. This involves pooling

parcels of loans and selling them to institutions and pension funds who

earn the interest that you and all the other borrowers in a pool pay every

month.

Both FNB and SA Home Loans based their interest rates on short-term money

market rates. SA Home Loans uses the Johannesburg Interbank Lending Rate

and FNB uses the Bankers` Acceptance rate. These are wholesale rates at

which banks borrow money from one another. FNB and SA Home Loans charge you

a fixed amount of 2,1 percent on top of the current Jibar rate.

Loans based on these rates change daily, but you pay the same rate for

three months.

Noel Young, divisional director mortgage lending at NBS, says the Superate

interest rate is linked to a basket of short-term money market rates which

includes the Bank Acceptance rate. The rate is not fixed at a certain

percentage above the money market rates, but will depend on the cost of

funding to the bank. The rate will have to remain competitive with SA Home

Loans and FNB, he says.

Like the rates offered by SA Home Loans and FNB, NBS`s new bond rate is

also reviewed on a quarterly basis. But the bank does not intend to

securitise these loans.

The advantage for borrowers, says Young, is increased flexibility. In

securitised products the number and the frequency of withdrawals you can

make are often limited. But the NBS product offers the same withdrawal

benefits as an ordinary loan, where you can withdraw money as often as you

like provided you don`t exceed your maximum loan amount. Generally banks

limit withdrawals from your loan via ATMs to two a month, but you can apply

for further withdrawals.

With NBS`s new loan you will be able to borrow up to 70 percent of the

property`s value once you have repaid a portion of your loan. Should you

require more money, you can choose to transfer the loan to one of the other

NBS loan products which allows for a higher risk exposure.

The new loan is aimed primarily at new borrowers, but Young says existing

borrowers can apply provided they meet the loan criteria. He adds that NBS

borrowers who are locked into a fixed or step down product will not be

penalised for breaking their contracts to move to the new loan product.

A comparison of the three products shows:

* Minimum borrowing amounts are R200 000 at FNB and R100 000 at S A Home Loans;

* NBS and FNB have strict requirements about where your property is situated;

* In all cases you must have invested 30 percent in cash in your property;

* All three institutions will lend you only 70 percent of the value of your

property;

* FNB and SA Home Loans discount the bond registration costs you would

usually have to pay. At NBS, the standard fees are charged; and

* At SA Home Loans you can make two withdrawals a year with a minimum

amount of R20 000 each time; at FNB you can withdraw four times a year, at

least R1 000 each time; and at NBS you can withdraw as many times as you

wish.

The less risk you pose to the bank the better rate you will get, says Young.

By insisting that you have a 30 percent stake in your property banks are

lowering their risk because they know you will think carefully before

reneging on your home loan.

If you want to make use of the lower interest loans being offered, you

should consider buying a cheaper property or saving a 30 percent deposit

before you buy.

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