Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa December - January 2014 | Page 36

BONDS BY MEGAN TAYLOR Fixed Or Variable Which interest rate is best for your bond? A ccording to Rhys Dyer, CEO of ooba, South Africa’s biggest bond originator, the South African Reserve Bank isn’t likely to increase the lending rates for most of 2014. That’s good news for homeowners, but should they be leaping to fix their interest rates at this low level? “Given that the current interest rates are at a four-decade low, and this looks set to continue, fixing your interest rate at this time may not be favourable,” Dyer says. He explains that when you fix your interest rate on your home loan, it is normally fixed at a rate that is higher than the interest rate you would get if your home loan was on a normal variable interest rate. “If you fix your rate now, on the assumption that interest rates remain low for the next 12 months, you would be losing out on the benef its of the current low interest rate environment,” he says. Generally the interest rate offered by banks is based on the size of the home loan taken by the 36 applicant. In the past, home loan applicants could sometimes get interest rates from the banks that were below prime, however in today’s market, a good interest rate is the prime rate of 8.5%, largely due to the fact that the current level of the prime rate is already remarkably low. A variable rate is linked to the prime rate and fluctuates with any changes in the rate, resulting in a proportional change in the interest that the homeowner will pay. If the rate is cut the homeowner will benefit from the cut and pay less, however they will also be subjected to the full impact of any increase in the rate as well. Adrian Goslett, CEO of RE/MA X says that fixing the rate will give homeowners the benefit of knowing what their instalment will be over a fixed period of time, irrespective of the change in prime interest rate, however this does come at a co