logo
Borrower refinancing rush puts banks on notice

Borrower refinancing rush puts banks on notice

Give yourself a pat on the back homeowners, because we are finally holding the banks to account when it comes to mortgages.
New ABS figures have revealed nearly 100,000 home loans were refinanced in the June quarter. That's more than 1000 mortgages switching every day.
We are more engaged with our mortgages than ever before and we're more than willing to demand more from our banks or take our money elsewhere.
This has been bad news for banks because it means they can no longer rely on us paying them a loyalty tax … or as they would see it, a lazy tax.
MORE:Full list of banks yet to pass on rate cuts
Once upon a time, a bank would come to your primary school, give you a toy and let you open up a savings account. This was dressed up as educating young people about finance, but of course it was really about recruiting lifelong customers that would eventually take out a home loan and pay the bank hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest.
When I was a kid, families very much stuck with their same bank for their whole lives. They might switch here and there, but always between the big four and often it was about the customer service experience. Did they like their bank manager? Was there a branch in their suburb or town?
In hindsight, it's amazing how much we trusted and liked our banks, considering at one point we were paying them about $25,000 in interest a year on a loan worth $140,000. Meanwhile, the bank saved its best deals for new customers and retaining those who threatened to leave.
Now, things are different. You no longer have a bank manager, you probably don't have a branch and your customer service experience involves being on hold for long periods of time with an offshore call centre.
The good news is that there are now more than 100 lenders to choose from. The competition for cheaper rates keeps heating up and if you stay on top of what is out there, you can make sure you don't pay a cent in lazy tax.
The RBA just announced its third rate cut of the year. Traditionally, when there are back to back rate cuts, banks start only passing on some of the savings, or none at all, but we have had them on notice since February, when we started naming and shaming lenders who had not passed on savings to customers.
MORE:Rate cut to trigger buying boom
Once the May rate cut came around, lenders acted faster to keep customers happy. And after the RBA lowered again in August, it only took two days for 85 lenders to announce variable rate cuts; all of them by the full 0.25 per cent.
Not bad when you look at the past record of the big banks.
Before this year, there had been 10 RBA rate cuts over a decade. A Canstar analysis revealed that of the 10 cuts, only four were passed on in full by CBA, NAB and ANZ. Westpac could only manage two. Westpac has therefore passed on more rate cuts this year than it did over the previous decade.
Could people power be making a difference? Could a lack of loyalty finally be a two-way street?
Banks have finally realised they need to compete for our money. And when you think about how much money we pay them – double the cost of our homes and then some- in interest over the life of a loan, we really should all be VIP customers. We should be their corporate box guests at grand finals and F1 races. They should be sending us flowers and gift hampers and finding all sorts of ways to sweeten the deal for us, rather than quietly charging us more interest than their new customers and hoping we don't notice.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jimmy Recard comes out on top after tough battle in Group 3 Vain Stakes at Caulfield
Jimmy Recard comes out on top after tough battle in Group 3 Vain Stakes at Caulfield

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Jimmy Recard comes out on top after tough battle in Group 3 Vain Stakes at Caulfield

'J.R., Jimmy Recard. Raise your glass for the king of the bar.' Art again proved prophetic after Jimmy Recard 's latest win in Saturday's Group 3 Vain Stakes (1100m) at Caulfield. Jimmy Recard, named after a 2008 song by Perth hip hop artist Drapht, gave his large band of owners a third opportunity to celebrate a win when he denied Tycoon Star in a physical finish to the Vain Stakes. Tycoon Star looked set to post a first-up win when he got into the clear early in the straight but laid in over the last 200m while Jamie Melham drove Jimmy Recard along the inside section of the track. Tycoon Star bumped Jimmy Recard but the Ciaron Maher -trained colt had a half-head to spare on the line, posting his third win in four starts. 'I just think he's improving every time he runs,' Maher said of the Bennett Racing-syndicated three-year-old. 'We had notions of taking him for a stakes race in Adelaide but we thought we'd reset for the spring. 'He's certainly started the spring the right way.' JIMMY RECARD! What a battle down the straight in the Vain Stakes! The colts were all over the place but its Jimmy who prevailed â­� @jamieleemelham @cmaherracing @RacingBennett â€' 7HorseRacing ðŸ�Ž (@7horseracing) August 16, 2025 Maher combined with Bennett Racing to race Southport Tycoon, who won two Group 1 races before heading to stand at Widden Stud. Maher hoped Jimmy Recard could improve sufficiently to follow Southport Tycoon to stud. 'I was at the stallion parades for Southport Tycoon yesterday when Widden were introducing him. Hopefully this can be the next one,' Maher said. 'He's certainly a very well-bred colt and he's a great type. 'He's got a bright future.' Tycoon Star's jockey Mark Zahra said the Lindsay Park-trained colt had his opportunity to win at his first start since the Group 1 Golden Slipper. 'He was going to win but he was first-up and the winner's come along the fence where nothing has come all day,' Zahra said. 'He was strong enough to the line but I think he had his chance, he's still green though.' â– â– â– â– â– 'Angry' mare makes trainers happy with Regal Roller success Pop Award completed her reformation from problem child to black-type performer when she prevailed in Saturday's Listed Regal Roller Stakes at Caulfield. Co-trainer Lyn Tolson described Pop Award as 'an angry horse' when she first arrived at the stable she shares with daughter Leonie Proctor after proving too much of a handful for a couple of horse breakers. 'She could strike at you and go at you better than any stallion,' Tolson said of Pop Award earlier in the week. POP AWARD ðŸ'¥ Five on the trot, from maiden grade to a Group 3! What a story for the Tolson/Proctor/Cartwright clan ðŸ'– â€' 7HorseRacing ðŸ�Ž (@7horseracing) August 16, 2025 However, Pop Award had proven herself to punters with four straight wins before she stepped up Listed level for the first time in the Regal Roller Stakes. Last year's winner Arkansaw Kid ($3.10 fav) looked set to sweep past Pop Award ($5) halfway down the straight but the mare's fitness advantage and 6kg weight pull helped her hold a length on her rival on the line. Tolson said winning the Regal Roller Stakes was a great birthday present for her grandson, Proctor's son Matthew Cartwright. 'We rolled the dice today and we thought, 'oh god, are we going a little bit too high?' as this is only her seventh run,' she said. 'We thought that it was only going to get harder and if we throw her in the deep end now, we could always come back (in class) if we have to. 'She definitely stood up.' The Grahame Begg-trained Royal Insignia ($7.50) also made an encouraging start to his spring campaign with his solid third with jockey Jordan Childs in the saddle.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers flag approvals changes in environmental laws
Treasurer Jim Chalmers flag approvals changes in environmental laws

The Australian

time3 hours ago

  • The Australian

Treasurer Jim Chalmers flag approvals changes in environmental laws

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says Australians are 'burning cash' waiting for approvals as he takes aim at Australia's sluggish productivity rate ahead of a three-day talkfest in Canberra. Chalmers will next week host an economic reform roundtable in Canberra where boosting productivity and building resilience in Australia's economy and budget will take centre-stage. Speaking with The Guardian, Mr Chalmers said slow approval times by governments and councils had stymied productivity. 'It will be one of the main ways that people think through our regulatory challenges and our challenges around the time it takes to get projects approved,' Chalmers told the Guardian. 'In all the consultation I've been doing – in housing, renewable energy projects – there are too many instances where people are burning cash waiting for approvals to build things that we desperately want people to build.' The treasurer's remarks signal reform to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act is a high priority for the re-elected government. The Albanese government failed to deliver on its promise of reform the country's complex environmental laws its first term. Treasurer Jim Chalmers told The Guardian reform to the country's environmental laws, including the permitting process, could boost productivity. Picture: NewsWire/Martin Ollman. Separately, Mr Chalmers told NewsWire on Friday that Australia's sluggish birthrate meant the country would have to lift productivity to maintain living standards. 'It's not surprising that the birthrate has slowed given the pressures on people, including financial pressures,' he said. 'We want to make it easier for them to make that choice. If they want to have more kids, we want to make it easier for them to do that, and that's what motivates a lot of our changes.' As Australia struggles to boost the economy, and in turn raise wages and living standards, it's contending with a sluggish birthrate of 1.5 births per woman, which is under the 2.1 figure needed to sustain population growth. Boosting productivity will be essential to ensuring that Australia's ageing population can weather economic headwinds, the Treasurer said. 'Now, the reason why the productivity challenge is important to this is because our society is ageing, and over time, there will be fewer workers for every person who's retired,' he said. 'We need to make sure that our economy is as productive as it can be, as strong as it can be to withstand that demographic change, which is going to be big and consequential.'

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says too many Aussies are ‘burning cash' waiting for approvals
Treasurer Jim Chalmers says too many Aussies are ‘burning cash' waiting for approvals

News.com.au

time4 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says too many Aussies are ‘burning cash' waiting for approvals

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says Australians are 'burning cash' waiting for approvals as he takes aim at Australia's sluggish productivity rate ahead of a three-day talkfest in Canberra. Chalmers will next week host an economic reform roundtable in Canberra where boosting productivity and building resilience in Australia's economy and budget will take centre-stage. Speaking with The Guardian, Mr Chalmers said slow approval times by governments and councils had stymied productivity. 'It will be one of the main ways that people think through our regulatory challenges and our challenges around the time it takes to get projects approved,' Chalmers told the Guardian. 'In all the consultation I've been doing – in housing, renewable energy projects – there are too many instances where people are burning cash waiting for approvals to build things that we desperately want people to build.' The treasurer's remarks signal reform to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act is a high priority for the re-elected government. The Albanese government failed to deliver on its promise of reform the country's complex environmental laws its first term. Separately, Mr Chalmers told NewsWire on Friday that Australia's sluggish birthrate meant the country would have to lift productivity to maintain living standards. 'It's not surprising that the birthrate has slowed given the pressures on people, including financial pressures,' he said. 'We want to make it easier for them to make that choice. If they want to have more kids, we want to make it easier for them to do that, and that's what motivates a lot of our changes.' As Australia struggles to boost the economy, and in turn raise wages and living standards, it's contending with a sluggish birthrate of 1.5 births per woman, which is under the 2.1 figure needed to sustain population growth. Boosting productivity will be essential to ensuring that Australia's ageing population can weather economic headwinds, the Treasurer said. 'Now, the reason why the productivity challenge is important to this is because our society is ageing, and over time, there will be fewer workers for every person who's retired,' he said. 'We need to make sure that our economy is as productive as it can be, as strong as it can be to withstand that demographic change, which is going to be big and consequential.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store