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Interest rate cut: How much you’ll save on a R1 million bond over 20 years

The South African Reserve Bank’s (SARB’s) monetary policy committee (MPC) will meet on Thursday this week and there’s likely to be GOOD news for those drowning in debt.

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The meeting is scheduled for Thursday, 19 September with the official announcement due shortly after 15:00.

The MPC is widely expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points (bps).

As a reminder, the repo rate currently stands at 8.25% with the prime lending rate at 11.75%.

The MPC has hiked interest rates by a cumulative 475 basis points since 2021, despite keeping the rate unchanged at the last seven meetings.

The current repo rate of 8.25% represents a 15-year high (since 2009) and has had scores of South Africans desperately struggling to finance their debt.

Encouragingly, while four members of the MPC voted to keep rates unchanged at the most recent meeting in July, two at the time already voted for a 25 basis point cut. 

What would a 25 basis point cut mean in monetary terms?

By way of an example (see graph below), a bond of R1 million over a standard 20-year term with repayments at prime (11.75%) currently costs R10 837 per month to finance.

Should the SARB cut that prime lending rate by 25 basis points to 11.50%, that will mean a monthly bond repayment amount of R10 664.

That represents a monthly saving of R173.

Over the course of 20 years (240 months), that equates to a saving of R41 466, on the assumption there would be no further rate changes during that period.

But here are the scary numbers!

To finance a R1 million bond over 20 years at prime does NOT cost R1 million. In fact, it costs a staggering R2 600 897.

Do the sums yourself.

R10 837 x 240 months = R2 600 880 (give or take a few cents per month).

A rate cut of 25 basis points, as mentioned, reduces the monthly repayment to R10 664.

That changes the total repayment over 20 years to:

R10 664 x 240 months = R2 559 360.

But here’s the scariest part …

As mentioned, the SARB has hiked interest rates by 475 basis points over the last 15 years, meaning in 2009 the prime lending rate stood at 7%.

The same calculation above on a R1 million bond at prime (7%) over 20 years once cost R7 753 per month.

That’s R3 084 less per month than it currently costs before any rate change this week.

Or … R740 160 over the course of the full 20 years if you prefer.

SARB MPC MEETING DATES FOR 2024

The MPC meets every second month.

The SARB’s final meeting of the year will take place on Thursday, 21 November, where, according to BusinessTech, another 25 basis point cut is potentially on the cards.

Month Date
January 25 January – No rate change
March 27 March – No rate change
May 30 May – No rate change
July 18 July – No rate change
September 19 September
November 21 November

Monthly bond repayments calculator

The South African website’s table below shows the current monthly bond repayments on various bond values over a 20-year period assuming no deposit and that repayments are at prime (11.75%) as well as the expected cost after next week’s 25 basis point cut and the monthly saving that would entail:

Bond Current Expected Saving
R750 000 R8 128 R7 998 R130
R800 000 R8 670 R8 531 R139
R850 000 R9 212 R9 065 R147
R900 000 R9 753 R9 598 R155
R950 000 R10 295 R10 131 R164
R1 000 000 R10 837 R10 664 R173
R1 500 000 R16 256 R15 996 R260
R2 000 000 R21 674 R21 329 R345
R2 500 000 R27 093 R26 661 R432
R3 000 000 R32 511 R31 993 R518
R3 500 000 R37 930 R37 325 R605
R4 000 000 R43 348 R42 657 R691
R4 500 000 R48 767 R47 989 R778
R5 000 000 R54 185 R53 321 R864

To rent or pay off a bond: What do YOU do?

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