Increased competition in the home loan market, a wider range of variable loan special offers and extended cash rate stability look to be suppressing borrowers’ appetite for fixed rate loans. Demand for such loans has taken a tumble, the first fall since July 2010, as a greater proportion of new borrowers move to take up variable rate deals, according to a new report.

The latest data from Mortgage Choice, the country’s largest independently-owned mortgage broker, shows 10.7 per cent of the home loans approved for its customers in February had a fixed interest rate. This compared to 15.3 per cent in January, 15.2 per cent in December and 11.2 per cent in November.

The consumption of fixed rate loans fell for the first time in four months in the majority of states by an average of 6 percentage points, except WA, where demand grew by 1.2 percentage points.

Mortgage Choice spokesperson Kristy Sheppard said, “The appetite for fixed interest rates is at its lowest since October 2010, where it sat at 8 per cent of our loan approvals before rising as consumers reacted to November’s surprise rate increases. Last month’s fall in demand coincides with the start of the ‘lender war’ for home loan volume growth.”

“It appears new borrowers were lapping up the newly introduced deals on offer in February, taking advantage of lenders’ various incentives as they compete to outstrip each other of vital market share.

“A move away from fixed interest rates may also signal an uptick in positive consumer sentiment towards the economic outlook. The next cash rate rise is now tipped for mid to late this year.

“Ongoing discount loans - where the interest rate is discounted over the entire loan term usually in return for an annual fee - experienced a 2.1 percentage point drop in popularity. This occurred as borrowers, smitten by the range of special offers, increased their demand for standard and basic variable rate loans, by 3.9 and 1.9 percentage points respectively.”

In February, standard variable rate home loans continued to be the loan of choice, at 34.6 per cent of Mortgage Choice’s news approvals. Basic variable loans followed at 25.6 per cent, before ongoing discount loans at 23.3 per cent, which took a step back from second spot in January.

Demand for line of credit home loans (often popular with investors) rose marginally to 5.1 per cent of approvals from 4.8 per cent the month prior while introductory rate home loans accounted for only 0.9 per cent, though this was up from 0.2 per cent.