Home buyers are flocking back into variable rate mortgages, which now account for 91 per cent of the residential lending market, their highest proportion in four months, a leading mortgage broker says. Mortgage broker Mortgage Choice reported on Tuesday that in April basic variable mortgages accounted for 48.15 per cent of all home loans approved - up nearly one per cent from March, while standard variable mortgages comprised 42.77 per cent of the market, down 1.47 per cent from March. Basic variable loans generally have fewer loan features than a standard variable loan, Mortgage Choice says.Fixed rate loans accounted for four per cent of all approvals, up one percentage point from a month earlier."Basic variable loans have been the most popular loan type for four months now, after overtaking standard variable for the first time on our records in January 2009," Mortgage Choice senior corporate affairs manager Kristy Sheppard said in a statement.Rates charged on variable home loans move in line with interest rates as set by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), which has successively cut its overnight cash rate since September last year to a 49-year low."Despite interest rates being at their lowest in decades, the volatile global and domestic economic climate is having a strong influence over loan product preferences," Ms Sheppard said."Consumer conservatism with rates and fees continues to win out against loan flexibility and extra features."Line of credit loans in April, popular with property investors, posted a fall of five per cent from the previous month.
Commitments for owner-occupied housing rose 4.9 per cent in March, seasonally adjusted, to 59,793, Australian Bureau of Statistics data this month showed.Total housing finance by value rose by 6.7 per cent in March, seasonally adjusted, to $20.688 billion, the latest month in which data was available.
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