The latest round of mortgage wars is heating up, with three more banks cutting interest rates in the fight to attract customers.
A week after the Herald reported that BNZ and Kiwibank had trimmed some fixed-term rates, ASB, ANZ and the Co-operative Bank have now announced cuts.
Industry experts expect more to follow suit in the battle for the lucrative home loan market, with mortgage holders set to save thousands of dollars in repayments and potentially shave years off their loans.
But the banking sector is also being accused of price gouging to generate extra profit, with claims banks are unfairly levying thousands of dollars in additional charges on some low-equity borrowers then blaming the fees on the Reserve Bank's loan to value ratio (LVR) limits.
This month, Kiwibank cut its two-year rate by 20 basis points to 5.55 per cent for borrowers with at least a 20 per cent deposit.