Launched on April 26, the offer reduced Kiwibank's previous advertised one-year fixed-term interest rate of 5.65 per cent by 66 basis points and easily gave it the lowest advertised one-year mortgage rate by a bank. At that point the next lowest was HSBC's 5.29 per cent, only available to that bank's premier customers who must have either a minimum of $500,000 in home loans with HSBC, or at least $100,000 of savings and investments with HSBC. Westpac was next lowest at 5.59 per cent.
However, since then all banks have cut their fixed-term - but not floating - mortgage rates and most, including Kiwibank, are now advertising standard one-year rates of 5.25 per cent. TSB Bank is slightly lower than the pack at 5.20 per cent.See all advertised bank mortgage rates here.
The global economic outlook has darkened over the past month or so with financial markets spooked by a potential Greek exit from the Eurozone and revelations of mounting problems in Spain, another Eurozone member. There's also growing evidence of a slowdown in the Chinese economy with Glenn Stevens, Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, saying yesterday this was something Australia's central bank will keep an eye on.
Here in New Zealand, most economists are picking the Reserve Bank will leave the Official Cash Rate at its record low of 2.5 per cent until at least early 2013. Meanwhile, swap or wholesale rates the banks' themselves borrow at have been falling. As of yesterday, the one-year swap rate was down 35 basis points at 2.38 per cent since April 26 having been even lower, at 2.32 per cent on May 21. Financial markets are pricing in expectations of 33 basis points of cuts in the OCR in the next 12 months.
'Acceptable returns'
Earlier this month Thompson told interest.co.nz the 4.99 per cent "special" was proving Kiwibank's most successful special yet with extra staff assigned to meet demand from both existing and new customers.
He said then the offer wasn't a loss leader with Kiwibank making an "acceptable" return on writing one-year home loans at 4.99 per cent. The bank, a subsidiary of the state owned enterprise New Zealand Post, said in its interim results briefing in February that it was 87 per cent funded through customer deposits.
Banks, including Kiwibank, have also been cutting term deposit rates in recent weeks. Kiwibank is currently offering 4.35 per cent interest on 12-month term deposits with a minimum deposit of $5,000 when interest is paid monthly and 4.40 per cent when interest is paid on maturity.
For minimum deposits of at least $10,000, it's offering 4.45 per cent where interest is paid monthly and 4.50 per cent when it's paid on maturity. See all advertised bank term deposit rates for terms of one to five years here.
INTEREST.CO.NZ