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      It's about this time in a new, or returned, property buyer's journey that they start to come across a whole bunch of terms and acronyms that it will pay for them to understand. And, when it comes to finance, the two big ones to do with your mortgage are LVR and LMI.

      Most first‐time buyers don't have a 20 per cent deposit, because it is difficult to save such a high figure while also paying rent and normal household expenses. However, just because you have less than this figure as a deposit doesn't mean you won't qualify for a property loan, although it might mean you need to change where and what you are looking at buying (more about that in later chapters). Your broker will be able to provide advice on the lenders best suited to borrowers with higher LVRs of, say, 90/10 — 90 per cent (loan) versus 10 per cent (deposit).

      In Australia, the catch is that you will need to pay something called lenders mortgage insurance (LMI) — yep, another new acronym to learn. LMI is a fee that is charged to borrowers with a deposit smaller than 20 per cent of the purchase price of the property.

      Now, it might sound like it's an insurance policy for you, but it's not. It's insurance for the lender via an additional fee from the buyer because of the perceived higher risk in lending money to a borrower with a smaller deposit.

      NICOLA TELLS:

       HOW LMI HELPED PAY FOR A PENTHOUSE

       I bought the first three properties for my portfolio when I was single, earning an average wage.

       My first one, in 2007, was when the Brisbane property market was going through a rare growth phase. There were buyers everywhere and not much stock on the ground. The deposit I had saved wasn't enough to secure me anything likely to improve my finance lot in life.

       So my younger brother and I decided to buy something together, with some help from our parents, and I made peace with paying LMI to make it happen.

       I bought my brother out of his share of that property a few years later. I ended up borrowing against that property twice more to add to my portfolio.

       I recently sold that first one, which was a townhouse in a rather bland (at the time) middle‐ring suburb, and it has helped finance my dream property — a riverfront penthouse.

      A fixed interest rate is usually a lower percentage than variable. Sometimes this can provide financial peace of mind, especially if there may be a change to your income in the short term, such as changing jobs, studying, or having your first, or your next, child.

      However, fixed‐rate mortgages generally have a number of limitations, including restricting how much of the principal loan amount you can pay off over the fixed‐rate period, which is generally between one and five years.

      A property loan with a variable interest rate means that the interest rate can go up or down depending on the monetary policy of the Reserve Bank of Australia (or equivalent) as well as your lender's own interest rate movements. There's no question that choosing between a fixed rate and a variable one can mean thousands of dollars in savings over the life of the loan, which your mortgage broker can outline

      Loan structure is just as important, though, if you ask us.

      Many borrowers get so fixated on interest rates that they forget about loan structure entirely, so they rush in and sign up with a lender for a five‐year fixed rate just because they're the cheapest, without reading the fine print. Then not long after, their circumstances change unexpectedly — life is like that — and they find themselves stuck with a loan that they can't change or refinance because the only thing they considered was the super‐low interest rate that was dangled like a golden carrot in front of them at the time.

      BREAK FEES — WHAT ARE THEY?

       You need to be aware of break fees, so here goes.

       A break fee represents the bank's loss if a borrower repays their loan early or switches their loan product, interest rate or repayment type during a fixed‐rate period.

       When the bank agrees to lend you money at a fixed interest rate, they obtain money from the ‘money market' out there at wholesale interest rates based on you making your repayments as agreed until the end of the fixed‐rate period. If you don't, and wholesale interest rates change, then the bank may make a loss. They try and recoup this loss by charging you a break fee.

      On the whole, interest rates generally don't move up or down rapidly unless there is something serious happening, like a global health pandemic or a global financial crisis!

      During both of these events, interest rates were lowered rapidly to underpin, and stimulate, the economy during the resultant turbulent economic times, but that is far from normal.

      Of course, mortgages do need to be repaid at some point, whether it's through your own mortgage repayments, rental income, or selling the property. Most property owners opt for a principal and interest mortgage over 25 or 30 years, which means they are making regular repayments that will eventually pay off the debt.

      On the other hand, investors tend to use interest‐only repayments, because only the interest is a tax deduction, but also to reduce the additional cash‐flow demands from their own bank accounts (we talk more about this in chapter 8) after rental income.

      KATE TELLS:

      TO FIX OR NOT TO FIX?

       Many years ago, I was advised to fix all of my loans at over 6 per cent (which seemed good at the time) for three years — right before interest rates started falling.

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