If there’s a double interest rate rise this week, more borrowers become ‘mortgage prisoners’


Like hundreds of thousands of other Australians, Madeline and Jacqueline Darkovska are prisoners to their mortgage.

The 24-year-old twin sisters are among borrowers who purchased at the height of the pandemic housing boom and are finding it impossible to refinance their home loan.

And with another double interest rate hike expected on Tuesday, the sisters — who are already struggling to meet higher mortgage repayments — fear they could lose their home in the coming months.

“We’ve been struggling a lot,” says Madeline, who had been working casual shifts as a clerk for a Perth hospital before losing her job and having to call on her mother, Val, to help her make the required mortgage repayments.

“I haven’t been able to afford a lot of things, based on lack of basic living, haven’t been able to purchase a lot of food for myself or even help pay for my car bill, mortgage, everything,” she tells ABC News.

As banks impose tougher lending standards and interest rate hikes drive property prices down, more Australians will find themselves in a mortgage trap, unable to refinance because no lender wants to take on the risk.

The Darkovska family assessing their finances in their Perth home in August 2022
Jacqueline, Val and Madeline Darkovska. The family are struggling to can refinance as the twins’ variable interest rate soars.(ABC News: Hugh Sando)

Late last year, the nation’s banking regulator, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), introduced more stringent “stress tests”, requiring loan applicants to show they can afford monthly repayments at 3 per cent more than the current rate.

However, Madeline and Jacqueline got into the property market when the stress test was just 2.5 per cent above the then rate.

In December 2020, the sisters took out a $360,000 loan to build their dream home, enticed by first home owner grants and the $25,000 HomeBuilder Grant (they later missed out on the $25,000 because they learnt that siblings did not qualify).

At the time of taking out their loan, their only option without a 10 per cent deposit, was to go with a small lender on a high variable interest rate of 4.54 per cent.

With four back-to-back rate rises, their repayments have shot up by more than $500 a month, and with more rate hikes expected to follow by year’s end, they could end up with a variable rate of about 8 per cent. 

That’s a dire prospect the sisters have been contemplating as they fight to hold on to their home in Aveley on the outskirts of Perth.

If the RBA pushes ahead with another 50-basis-point rate hike on Tuesday, the cash rate will hit the highest level since December 2014.

It will tip many people like the Darkovska twins into further mortgage stress, and at risk of defaulting.

“We’ll probably have to sell the house if we can’t keep up with the repayments — it’s really scary for us,” Madeline says.

Val and Madeline in their living room in Aveley Perth in August 2022
Val Darkovska (left) is helping her daughter Madeline (right) keep up with mortgage repayments.(ABC News: Hugh Sando)

More Australians in ‘negative equity’ as house prices fall

Tougher lending standards are not the only problem for Australians who borrowed heavily at the height of the pandemic housing boom.

Many people who took out big loans, with low deposits, also face the prospect of falling property prices, which is another factor that can make them a “mortgage prisoner”.

If house values decline by 20 per cent over the next 18 months, as some analysts are predicting, that would tip more Australians into negative equity — when the value of property falls below the outstanding balance on the mortgage used to purchase it.

“Mortgage prison is where you can’t refinance, and the main reason that would be is if the equity in your property falls below 20 per cent,” RateCity’s research director Sally Tindall says.

Sally Tindall in her Sydney office in August 2022
RateCity research director Sally Tindall says many people are struggling to refinance because they are in negative equity. (ABC News: Dan Irvine)

“Banks, typically, will charge refinancers lenders’ mortgage insurance, which can run into the tens of thousands of dollars, if they’re refinancing, but don’t have that magic 20 per cent deposit.”

According to the latest data from banking regulator APRA, in the six months to March this year, the value of new loans written, with a deposit size of 20 per cent or less, was $112 billion. RateCity estimates this applied to more than 176,000 mortgages.



Read More:If there’s a double interest rate rise this week, more borrowers become ‘mortgage prisoners’

2022-09-04 21:19:37

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