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Rate hikes: water off duck’s back for some mortgage holders while others save for survival - featured image
By Brett Warren
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Rate hikes: water off duck’s back for some mortgage holders while others save for survival

key takeaways

Key takeaways

A Canstar survey shows a growing number of Aussies are saving for a major purchase or expense this year compared to 2022

More Australians are saving this year for travel, holidays and buying property and fewer are saving to build up their emergency fund

There is a case of two-speed savers with some saving for survival and others saving to sustain their goal

More Australians are currently saving for a major expense or purchase than they were last year, according to new research from Canstar.

Their survey of over 9,500 Australian adults found 71% were currently saving for a big purchase or expense.

This is an increase from 66% last year and comes at a time when the cost of living and rising interest rates are grappling with household budgets.

More Australians are saving this year for travel and holidays, and buying property, while fewer are saving to build up their emergency fund, buy a car or purchase household goods.

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Australians saving for a major expense or purchase

Savings goal

2022

2023

Change

Travel and holidays

50%

57%

7%

Building up an emergency fund

34%

33%

-1%

Property

21%

24%

3%

Car

26%

24%

-2%

Household goods

22%

21%

-1%

Home renovations

16%

16%

0%

Personal investment (excluding housing)

16%

14%

-2%

Medical expenses

13%

13%

0%

School fees/education costs

11%

12%

1%

Other (please specify)

3%

4%

1%

Source: www.canstar.com.au. Nationally representative survey of 9,144 in 2022 and 9,122 in 2023 Australians aged 18+. Conducted online in May 2022 and 2023. Sample for this question based on Australians currently saving including 6,043 savers in 2022 and 6,518 savers in 2023. Respondents chose all responses that may apply.

The case of two-speed savers: survival versus sustaining savings goals

Canstar’s Group Executive, Financial Services, Steve Mickebecker explains this is a case of two-speed savers, with some still saving for survival and others saving to sustain their goals.

“More Australians are saving in 2023 than a year earlier with holidays and buying property gaining greater momentum while saving for an emergency fund has come off the boil ever so slightly and buying a car has taken a back seat,” says Mickenbecker.

Mortgage holders account for the biggest increase in those saving for big-ticket items this year.

Higher loan repayments and tighter finances have likely left many borrowers with limited capacity to save, but they are hanging in there and hopeful to achieve their goal, even if it is just survival for many.

Amongst mortgage holders, travel and holidays are the top savings motivation, which is no surprise now that the shackles are off, but the proportion of borrowers saving to build an emergency fund is well up.

For some borrowers interest rate increases have been water off a duck's back, while others are in severe stress.

The slower than expected June quarter inflation figure gives hope that the Reserve Bank will pause cash rate increases in August.

The annual inflation figure of 6 percent is still a million miles from the target 2 to 3 percent band, but if this quarter’s 0.8 percent is maintained we will be almost there.

An interest rate pause would be very welcome respite for borrowers already facing repayments up by almost 60 percent over the past 15 months.

But with 39 percent of borrowers saving to build up an emergency fund, they are taking nothing for granted and are watchful for further rate hikes.

Mortgage holders are far less likely to be saving to buy a property, having little appetite for piling more high-cost debt on top of what they already have.

But those without a mortgage are still saving for the day they can buy a home, having put that plan on hold over the past year with first homebuyer participation remaining subdued. With the potential for the cash rate to remain on hold, that day may be one step closer.”

Mortgage holders vs. non-mortgage holders saving for major expense or purchase in 2023

Savings goal

Mortgage holders

Non-mortgage holders

Difference

Travel and holidays

60%

55%

5%

Building up an emergency fund

39%

31%

8%

Property

18%

26%

8%

Car

22%

25%

3%

Household goods

23%

21%

2%

Home renovations

32%

11%

21%

Personal investment (excluding housing)

16%

14%

2%

Medical expenses

10%

13%

3%

School fees/education costs

14%

11%

3%

Other (please specify)

3%

4%

1%

Source: www.canstar.com.au. Nationally representative survey of 9,122 in 2023 Australians aged 18+. Conducted online in May 2023. Sample for this question based on 6,518 Australians currently saving including 1,699 mortgage holders and 4,819 non-mortgage holders. Respondents chose all responses that may apply.

About Brett Warren Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
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