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Big four banks prove they do as they please with passing on interest rate cuts

The big four banks are doing as they please when it comes to passing on cash rate cuts to borrowers. So where are rates going to end up in 2020? HOW YOU WILL BE AFFECTED

Money Saver: What to consider when fixing your home loan rate.

The big four banks have proven to customers they do as they please.

We’ve had three cash rate cuts in 2019 and none of the nation’s largest institutions – the Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank, Westpac or ANZ – passed them all on in full.

This was much to the disgust of Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who ordered the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission to investigate why the banks didn’t pass on the RBA’s total 0.75 percentage point rate cut to borrowers.

They only passed on between 0.55 and 0.59 percentage points.

Regardless of what the big four banks do or have done, they don’t have to worry too much.

Four out of five mortgage customers still hold loans with the big banks, leaving only a small slice of the pie for the dozens of other lenders out there looking to snare clients.

Consumers might have been outraged with the banks after the horror show the financial services royal commission presented but whether it has had a significant impact on the big banks is yet to be seen.

The fact of the matter is customers rarely bother to switch.

Switching home loans can prove too hard for borrowers which could leave them wasting money on high costs.
Switching home loans can prove too hard for borrowers which could leave them wasting money on high costs.

The Australian Banking Association quizzed 1000 Australians and found in the past 12 months only 15 per cent switched transaction accounts, 10 per cent switched credit cards and 5 per cent switched their mortgages.

With Open Banking set to arrive in February 2020, consumers will have more power to take matters into their own hands.

Under the new regime consumers can share their personal transaction information between banks to help make educated decisions on whether they can score themselves better deals.

But will they be comfortable having their personal transaction data shared among institutions?

Time will tell.

The newest entrants into the banking sector – the digital-only banks such as Up Bank, Xinja, 86 400, Revolut, Volt and Judo Bank – are still only in their infancy.

Of those that do offer products – some neobanks haven’t got to this stage yet – they are yet to offer home loans, personal loans and credit cards.

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In the interim this means the big banks don’t have to worry about losing a horde of customers.

Neobanks are far more widely used in the UK but the trend might take some time, if at all, if it follows.

Then we have more cash rate cuts.

The financial experts are predicting another one, possibly two are on the horizon which could deliver more savings to borrowers, but the opposite for deposit customers.

Grab the popcorn because it’s going to be fascinating to see where interest rates – both on home loans and deposit accounts – end up in 2020.

@sophieelsworth

sophie.elsworth@news.com.au

Originally published as Big four banks prove they do as they please with passing on interest rate cuts

Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/moneysaverhq/big-four-banks-prove-they-do-as-they-please-with-passing-on-interest-rate-cuts/news-story/cdd3a2051e78ba220d3e33827bcc689a