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ECONOMY

Sweden’s mortgage war heats up as banks race to cut rates

Sweden's central bank lowered the key interest rate again by 0.25 percentage points on August 20th, while adding that it may cut rates two or three more times before the year is out. Which banks are cutting their rates in response?

Sweden's mortgage war heats up as banks race to cut rates
SBAB, one of Sweden's largest mortgage lenders, lowered rates following the announcement on Tuesday. Photo: Emma-Sofia Olsson/SvD/TT

One of Sweden’s largest mortgage providers, state-owned mortgage bank SBAB, lowered its variable mortgage rate by 0.10 percentage points and its fixed-rate mortgages by 0.10-0.25 percentage points on August 21st, the day after the Riksbank’s decision to cut the policy rate.

The policy rate is the central bank’s main monetary policy tool. It decides which rates Swedish banks can deposit in and borrow money from the Riksbank, which in turn affects the banks’ own interest rates on savings, loans and mortgages.

“The Riksbank’s lowering of the policy rate means that the our borrowing costs as a bank are lower, which means we can further reduce mortgage rates,” SBAB’s CEO Mikael Inglander said in a press release.

Swedbank quickly followed suit and cut rates on all its mortgages by 0.05-0.10 percentage points.

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Danske Bank on Tuesday lowered its variable mortgage rate by 0.20 percentage points and Nordea 0.10 percentage points.

Swedbank also cut interest rates on its savings accounts by 0.25 percentage points and 0.10 on private accounts, and SBAB cut its savings account rates by 0.25 percentage points.

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How low is the policy rate now, and how low could it get?

The policy rate currently stands at 3.5 percent, down from 3.75 percent, with the next announcement scheduled for September 25th.

If inflation continues to follow expectations, then the central bank has said that it could lower rates faster than predicted in June – two or three more times this year.

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There are announcements scheduled for September, November and December, so this means that we could potentially be in for four consecutive interest rate cuts before the end of the year.

Predictions from the bank indicate that the policy rate could dip below 3 percent this year, dropping below 2 percent in the latter half of 2025.

This doesn’t mean that interest rates on mortgages will drop below 2 percent by the end of 2025, but we can (probably) expect them to be substantially lower than they were at the end of 2023. The policy rate doesn’t directly control mortgage rates, but there’s an indirect effect.

The policy rate and key interest rate expectations based on market expectations

Diagram showing the key interest rate and market expectations. Full lines indicate expectations as of August 16th, 2024 while dashed lines are expectations in June. Sweden is in dark blue, Eurozone in red, USA in light blue and UK in yellow. Source: National central banks and the Riksbank.

Member comments

    1. The interest rate listed on the banks’ websites usually don’t update immediately, but Swedbank says on its homepage that it will lower mortgage rates from tomorrow.

  1. The central bank lowered the rate by 0.25%. SBAB lowered the interest rate they pay you by the full 0.25% but the interest you pay them has been lowered by only 0.1%. What happens to the other 0.4% that you are paying to SBAB tha now doesn’t need to go to the central bank? This does not seem entirely fair to me.

  2. What I am confused about is that we’ve had high interest rates for a few years which have increased mortgages. But what’s happened to the interest we earn for money sitting in bank accounts?

    Are banks just taking a few % points for profit? Or does the Swedish banking system not work in that way? Bank accounts earning no interest in real terms loose value.

  3. Still too high. They are going to have to drop to 2% before the housing market really takes off: People are not getting the pay increases they once had, and energy taxes and food prices are still rising. Banks such as SEB are painfully slow at reducing interest rates… 0.1% here and there, and all because they have been enjoying the extra income for so long they are reluctant to let it go. I want to see ALL banks forced to drop rates immediately, and in line with Riksbanken.

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WORKING IN SWEDEN

Swedish long-term unemployment continues to rise

Long-term unemployment rose for the second month in a row last month, according to new figures from Statistics Sweden.

Swedish long-term unemployment continues to rise

“In July, long-term unemployment rose by 45,000 people compared to July last year,” Statistics Sweden statistician Louise Stener said in a statement.

The agency recently said that the Swedish economy is in a “clear recession” according to almost all indicators, and unemployment figures are also reflecting that.

The number of people aged 15-74 who were in work amounted to 5,444,000 individuals, not seasonally adjusted – that’s a decrease of 80,000 compared to July last year, but not all of those people were classified as long-term unemployed (unemployed for at least 27 weeks).

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Long-term unemployment amounted to 164,000 people, with significant differences when broken down by age and gender.

There were 71,000 women and 93,000 men in long-term unemployment, and 149,000 young people (aged 15-24 years). Youth unemployment hit 17.7 percent, which is an increase of 6.5 percentage points. This data is not smoothed or seasonally adjusted.

The unemployment rate for 15-74 year olds according to smoothed and seasonally adjusted data stood at 8.3 percent – that’s the highest unemployment rate in a decade, including the pandemic. Youth unemployment was even higher, at 24.4 percent.

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