i'm in the same situation as well. what you can do is to enter the figures on Loans Comparison calculator which is available on www.infochoice.com.au
i asked my lender about the exiting fee and it's ridiculous.
basically the formula they use is: the balance of your loan x the difference between your fixed rate and money market rate x the proportion of time left in your fixed period.
for example, if you have 100k loan balance, 2 years left and 8.50% fixed rate, it'll be:
100K x 2 x (8.50% - 5% (estimated mm rate,it's a close figure)) = $7000.
in my case, it's not worth breaking the fixed term and switch over since i'll end up losing money.
i think you need to ask you lender for a more accurate information. who knows they might have a different calculation.
Permalink Reply by jane on December 4, 2008 at 12:46pm
yes!! i think its bizarre..I was with private lender before and the exitting fee for $266000 loan was 3500 and came to comm bank and with this bank i got 120000 fixed , may be it should be lower...i am thinking of selling my house and never to go for loan ever in my life untill i have whole money....I hate it...
at the moment, the only way to get out of fixed rate contract and not losing money is to find a loan that offers an interest rate lower than the money market rate (which is impossible) or make enough noise and fuss so the government will take serious action against excessive fee.
aha, the way i see it is this is the risk i have accepted when i decided to split my loan. i enjoyed lower payment during the rate hike and now i take the loss from the extra money i pay since the rate cuts.
that's ok.
the reason i fixed half of my loan was based on a sound judgment and strategy and i would do it again.there is NO way i could have known then that the interest rate would go this low.
Not even the Mr. Stevens from RBA had expected this.
don't beat yourself over $40/month. so not worth it. and you can still offset it by saving money on other areas of your life.
you still enjoy the lower rate from the other half anyway. imagine the people who fixed the whole lot.
Hi Nikky,
Apologies for the delay, I have been away on hols and a little time off due to illness. All better now. Has your' lender dropped their rates any further since we last communicated? Depending on your' total debt amount, you should…