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Posted: 2024-09-23 21:30:00
Michele Bullock

RBA Governor Michele Bullock is likely to hold the cash rate for a 12th consecutive month.


Australian homeowners are paying over $5bn more on their monthly mortgage repayments compared to two years ago.

Canstar analysis of Reserve Bank data shows borrowers were charged about $14.5bn on their mortgage repayments in June this year, compared to $9.01bn in March 2022 – a $5.52bn (or 61 per cent) rise.

It comes as the RBA is set to meet for its monthly cash rate meeting Tuesday, and if they decide to hold at 4.35 per cent, it would mark 12 months of stagnation.

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The Commonwealth Bank of Australia is the most bullish on a cash rate cut, predicting it will drop as soon as December 24, while NAB remains conservative, forecasting the first fall on May 25.

SMARTdaily cover photo: RateCity's Sally Tindall

Ms Tindall said cash rate cuts would be music to borrowers’ ears once they transpired.


Canstar data insights director Sally Tindall said it was incredible to think Australian borrowers were shelling out an extra $5.5bn a month in mortgage repayments – and most households were making it work.

“Cash rate cuts will be music to borrowers’ ears, but the RBA is unlikely to move any time soon,” she said.

“Underlying inflation is tracking in the right direction but the reality is, it’s still sitting firmly in the threes.

“With unemployment holding steady at 4.2 per cent, the RBA has cover to continue its ‘wait-and-see’ strategy to get the job done, and properly.”

Supplied Money Scott O'Neill, co-founder and managing director of Rethink Investing

Mr O’Neill said some troubled mortgage holders may feel compelled to sell their homes.


Rethink Investing founder Scott O’Neill said mortgage holders facing difficulties would not find relief in the near future, which could compel some to sell their homes.

“Most borrowers are managing to keep their mortgage payments on schedule,” Mr O’Neill said.

“However, recent data from APRA (Australian Prudential Regulation Authority) for the March quarter indicates that mortgage arrears are on the rise, though they remain low compared to pre-Covid levels.

“Currently, mortgage arrears — consisting of non-performing loans and borrowers who are 30-89 days late on payments — account for 1.6 per cent of home loans across all Authorised Deposit-taking Institutions (ADIs).”

He added that this marked an increase from a recent low of 1 per cent recorded in the September quarter of 2022, but it was still lower than 1.8 per cent observed at the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020.


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