Tag: Festhypotheken

  • Changes in the Swiss mortgage market after key interest rate cut

    Changes in the Swiss mortgage market after key interest rate cut

    Following the surprising reduction in the key interest rate by the Swiss National Bank(SNB), mortgages based on the Swiss Average Rate Overnight (SARON) reference interest rate have become more favourable, while interest rates for fixed-rate mortgages have remained virtually unchanged. However, demand for SARON mortgages fell drastically year-on-year in the first quarter of 2024, Comparis reports in a press release on the comparison portal’s latest mortgage barometer. At Comparis mortgage partner HypoPlus, the share of SARON mortgages fell from around 25 per cent to around 3 per cent.

    At the same time, the share of fixed-rate mortgages with a medium term increased from around 20 per cent to around 33 per cent. At just under 50 per cent, the share of fixed-rate mortgages with a term of ten to 15 years was roughly the same as in the same quarter of the previous year. “In an environment of great uncertainty, fixed-rate mortgages with the longest possible term offer a high degree of planning security,” explains Comparis financial expert Dirk Renkert in the press release.

    According to Renkert, fixed-rate mortgages had already become more favourable by the end of 2023, as the market had assumed that key interest rates would be cut in 2024. With market interest rates of 1.7 to 1.8 per cent for ten-year fixed-rate mortgages, these continue to be more favourable than SARON mortgages. In order for SARON mortgages, which currently have interest rates of 2.1 to 2.3 per cent, to catch up with fixed-rate mortgages, “at least one, if not two, interest rate cuts” by the SNB will be necessary, says Renkert.

  • Fixed-rate mortgages overtake the former favourites

    Fixed-rate mortgages overtake the former favourites

    In Switzerland, there was a veritable run on variable Saron mortgages after the interest rate turnaround. However, the former favourites no longer seem as attractive as before.

    Interest rates for Swiss fixed-rate mortgages have been on a downward trajectory since mid-June 2023. According to the mortgage index of the Swiss online comparison service Moneyland, ten-year fixed-rate mortgages are currently quoted at 2.31 per cent – the lowest level since May 2022.

    The downward trend intensified after the Swiss National Bank (SNB) surprisingly announced a pause in interest rates in September. As a result, fixed-rate mortgages are no longer more expensive than variable-rate Saron mortgages, which previously accounted for a large proportion of new business, for the first time since October last year.

    Today, fixed-rate mortgages are significantly cheaper than Saron mortgages for all maturities. Two-year fixed-rate mortgages are currently 0.35 percentage points, five-year mortgages 0.42 percentage points and ten-year mortgages 0.30 percentage points cheaper than their variable-rate counterparts.

    Experts agree that interest rates in Switzerland appear to have peaked. The majority of market observers assume that the SNB will leave key interest rates unchanged at the next meeting and in the first quarter of 2024 and could only announce interest rate cuts in mid-2024.

    The property specialists at Moneypark also reported that over 90 per cent of mortgage providers surveyed in Switzerland expect the SNB to leave the key interest rate unchanged at 1.75 per cent at its next meeting. Over the next three months, interest rates are likely to remain stable for shorter terms of up to five years, while longer terms are expected to see more volatility and a trend towards lower interest rates.

  • Swiss real estate market – turnaround in interest rates, so what?

    Swiss real estate market – turnaround in interest rates, so what?

    After years of oversupply, the signs on the rental housing market are now clearly pointing to a shortage. Although demand will continue to exceed the supply of housing in the future, the real estate industry has so far not reacted with higher housing production. As long as rents do not rise sharply, there will be no incentive to expand residential construction in the current market environment. “The remaining vacancy reserves will soon be exhausted. Because the demand from immigration, individualization and demographic aging continues to increase,

    while at the same time fewer and fewer new homes are being built. Significant increases in asking rents are therefore only a matter of time and the topic will move up the political agenda,” says Neff.

    Densification progresses slowly
    It's getting tighter and tighter in Switzerland. The new buildings in this country are getting taller, the apartments in them are getting smaller and more and more people live in the residential zones. So the scarce land is being used more and more economically. However, because land use per person continues to rise and more and more people are living in Switzerland, the pace of densification is far from sufficient to stop urban sprawl. “High hurdles stand in the way of the faster densification demanded by spatial planning. The construction costs of projects with higher density are significantly higher than for a new building on a green field. In addition, strict, inflexible and inconsistent building and zoning regulations limit, complicate or make densification efforts impossible. A very liberal objection practice increases the planning effort for projects with high consolidation potential and leads to ever greater administrative effort," says Martin Neff. For example, the average time from the submission of a building application to the granting of a building permit for buildings with more than three apartments has increased significantly in the last 20 years from 92 days to 150 days.

    Bursting bubbles in the virtual world
    Trading in digital assets based on blockchain technology has experienced a real hype in the course of the cryptocurrency boom. In the meantime, land and real estate can also be purchased in the digital world, the so-called metaverse. The more attractive a piece of digital soil is, the more people will pay for it. The relative attractiveness is strongly defined by how many players are in the vicinity of the property on average. The market for digital real estate has experienced enormous price increases. At the beginning of January 2021, for example, in one of the best-known Mataverses "The Sandbox", the average plot of land was still being traded for less than 150 US dollars. By the end of the year, the price had risen to over $16,000, an increase in value of almost 11,000 percent. By the end of June 2022, prices had collapsed to $2,500. Such a bubble formation with subsequent bursting has been observed in many Metaverse projects in recent months. Among other things, this is favored by the fact that many projects are tied to cryptocurrencies for technical reasons, the future of which cannot yet be estimated either. "Due to the extreme volatility, the obvious tendency to bubble and the questionable intentions of many providers, virtual real estate remains primarily a playing field for speculators who are very willing to take risks," says Martin Neff.

    The “Immobilien Schweiz” study offers a detailed quarterly assessment of the Swiss real estate market. The current study and further information are available at raiffeisen.ch/casa.