August 22, 2008
Stanchart launches transparent home loan pegged to Sibor
Package has offset feature - interest earned on deposit can cut loan
interest
By LYNETTE KHOO
STANDARD Chartered Bank has upped the ante in the mortgage market
here with a new transparent home loan pegged to the Singapore
interbank offered rate (Sibor). The loan comes with an offset feature
where customers can use the interest earned on their deposits to
reduce the interest payable on their home loan.
MortgageOne Sibor loans will be priced at 0.8 per cent a year above
the three-month Sibor for the first three years.
Customers enjoy the same interest rates as their mortgage loan on two-
thirds of the deposits linked to MortgageOne Sibor, subject to a
maximum of their loan principal outstanding.
The remainder of the deposits will enjoy an interest rate of 0.5 per
cent a year.
By paying less interest every month, customers can repay their
mortgage loan faster compared with a traditional mortgage loan.
Under this loan package, customers can put any surplus funds in their
current account to reduce interest costs.
They also have the flexibility to withdraw these funds at any time
and capitalise on investment opportunities.
'MortgageOne Sibor is designed for all customers,' said Dennis Khoo,
general manager of lending at Standard Chartered Bank Singapore.
'For example, for a $500,000 mortgage loan with a 25-year tenure, a
customer can reduce interest payments by 20 per cent, just by saving
$500 every month.'
DBS Bank said it was the first to offer Sibor- pegged interest rates
early last year, after it launched the CPF ordinary account pegged
rates under its flagship POSB Home Ideal product in November 2006.
Under the DBS Managed Mortgage, customers can choose between the
three-month and 12-month Sibor benchmark and the loans are priced
between 0.8 and 1.25 per cent a year above the benchmark, depending
on the period of commitment.
Other big players in the home loan market here, however, do not seem
to be pressured to launch Sibor- linked loan packages as yet.
'There are many different housing loan packages in the market today.
Ultimately, what matters to the home loan borrower is that he is
given a choice of which home loan package best suits his needs and
his reading of the interest rates trend,' said Gregory Chan, head of
secured lending at OCBC Bank.
The bank currently offers fixed and variable packages as well as the
swap offer rate package, which is a customised home loan with
interest rates that are pegged to the three-month Singapore dollar
swap offered rates (SOR), starting from one per cent above SOR for
the first two years and 1.25 per cent above SOR thereafter.
Maybank told BT yesterday it does not have any immediate plans for
Sibor- pegged home loans at the moment.
Its home loan single board rate stands at 3.75 per cent a year
currently and is benchmarked against interbank rates, market
conditions, as well as business costs.
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