There has been a boom in refinancing of loans over the last year or so as interest rates rose.
Many homeowners have been refinancing their home loans over the past year and a half.
But is this refinancing trend seems to be slowing down now.
According to PropTrack, the past few months have seen as many as 28,000 homeowners externally refinancing to another lender every month, compared to pre-pandemic when only around 15,000 owner-occupiers would change lenders in a given month.
A further 11,000-12,000 investors have also been refinancing.
Refinancing or changing lenders and getting a preferable rate is probably one of the reasons we did not experience the "Fixed Rate Cliff" many were worried about.
Mr Angus Moore, PropTrack's Senior Economist, said:
"That level of activity is much higher than we’ve seen in the past couple of decades.
This has been spurred by homeowners rolling off of pandemic-era low fixed rate mortgages on to much higher variable rates.
Moving banks and refinancing at that point is attractive both because (1) the roll off acts a salient trigger for people to review their home loan, and (2) many will be rolling off on to variable rates that are higher than they could get by refinancing."
Refinancing activity looks like it is finally starting to slow down
PropTrack's data show that the number of external refinances peaked in July, and by September had fallen 18% for owner-occupiers and 15% for investors.
Mr Moore explained:
"That’s consistent with the peak of fixed rate expiries now being behind us.
Just under half of all fixed rate loans that were outstanding at the end of 2022 have now ended and rolled off onto variable rates.
That rollover peaked in June – when a little over 6.5% of previously outstanding fixed rate mortgages expired."
Is the refinancing boom really over?
Well, that slower rate of fixed-rate expiries means refinancing activity will probably continue to slow over the remainder of this year and into next.
Mr Moore further commented:
"While November and December will still see many homeowners rolling off their fixed rates, it isn’t as many as we were seeing in the middle of 2023.
And as we head in to 2024, the number of fixed rate expiries will taper off significantly – with most months seeing less than half as many fixed rate expiries as in the middle of this year.
That will take some of the heat out of refinancing activity."