The Southland Times

Warning: Strings attached to cash sweeteners

- Susan Edmunds

Home loan borrowers are being urged to understand what they sign up to when they take a cash ‘‘sweetener’’ from the bank.

Banks often offer cash payments of thousands of dollars to new borrowers to win their home loan business.

During the height of the property market, this ran to $10,000 or more for big business. Now, it’s common to get a few thousand to cover legal fees.

Broker Callan Wayne-Bowles, of the Home Loan Shop, said sweeteners were often 0.5 per cent to 0.8 per cent of the total amount borrowed, if the borrower had more than 20 per cent equity.

The deals are usually for customers who are new to the bank. But there are strings attached: In return, the bank requires the borrower to stay with it for about three years.

Wayne-Bowles said that did not always work in borrowers’ favour.

‘‘The banks like to get new lending on the books with a oneto two-year fixed rate and a cash payment that ties clients in for minimum three years depending on the bank,’’ he said.

‘‘When the fixed rate is up, the client is stuck with what refix rates the bank offers, as it is typically not financiall­y viable to refinance to another bank and pay the cash back, let alone the effort required to do so.’’

Bruce Patten, of Loan Market, said he had seen clients caught out and having to pay it back.

‘‘If you move and keep the mortgage with the bank, they wont claw back, but if you refinance to another lender they will claw back,’’ Patten said.

Brokers urged borrowers to consider the overall propositio­n. A smaller player such as SBS might have a lower upfront rate – it is advertisin­g 3.95 per cent for a year and might offer up to $1500 cash on a $500,000 loan. But a major bank might offer $4000 cash and a rate of 4.05 per cent.

‘‘It’s very important for the overall cost of debt over time. The cash you get on day one is more than the interest savings,’’ Wayne-Bowles said.

Broker Glen McLeod, of Edge Mortgages, said he had seen cases where one bank offered an interest rate that was half a percentage point lower than the other, but the higher rate came with a cash offer worth $2000 more. That cancelled out the benefit of the cheaper rate.

 ??  ?? Banks often offer a few thousand dollars to new home loan customers – but some will have to pay it back.
Banks often offer a few thousand dollars to new home loan customers – but some will have to pay it back.

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