The rate sword hangs
The Reserve Bank’s top brass is again floating the possibility of a rate hike. According to Reuters, Australia’s central banker has made it clear March is not off the table if inflation refuses to behave.
The RBA still doesn’t trust inflation further than it can throw a CPI basket.
Markets had been hoping for relief. Instead, the message is simple — if prices keep climbing, borrowers will feel it. Again. Mortgage holders have spent the past two years on a financial treadmill, and the RBA still has its finger hovering over the speed button.
Fixed rates climb again
Even before the RBA makes its next move, lenders are already nudging mortgage rates higher.
CBA and Westpac have reportedly increased fixed home-loan rates as expectations of prolonged monetary tightening persist.
Borrowers hoping the rate cycle had peaked may want to keep the champagne on ice. Banks tend to move first and ask questions later — particularly when wholesale funding costs start twitching.
Australia’s biggest lender
Forget the big four. Australia’s most active housing lender isn’t a bank at all.
It’s the “Bank of Mum and Dad.”
According to analysis highlighted by Small Caps, parents are pumping roughly $35 billion a year into helping their children buy property — effectively making family finance one of the country’s largest sources of housing credit.
That’s what happens when property prices sprint far ahead of wages. In the 1970s houses cost roughly three to four times income. In parts of modern Australia, it’s eight to twelve times income.
Banks still write the mortgages. Parents just provide the missing deposit.
Banks versus the robots
Commonwealth Bank has reportedly called in police after losing roughly $1 billion in suspected fraud tied to increasingly sophisticated scams and AI-generated forgeries.
Banks spent years replacing humans with algorithms. Now the algorithms have learned to impersonate humans.
According to reporting, criminals are using artificial intelligence to generate fake documents and identities convincing enough to bypass financial systems. The arms race between banks and fraudsters has entered a new phase: machines attacking machines.
Licence leak nightmare
Around 230,000 Australian driver licences have reportedly been exposed after a ransomware attack hit a vehicle finance firm.
The breach highlights a recurring modern finance reality: every company stores your personal data, and every hacker wants it.
Driver licence numbers are particularly sensitive because they’re widely used for identity verification. Once exposed, they can become the master key for identity fraud across banks, lenders and telcos.
Non-bank lending surge
While major banks debate rate moves, non-bank lenders are quietly expanding.
Bluestone has reportedly smashed a record with $1.2 billion in new loans in a single month, while other non-bank players continue to grow through broker channels.
The lesson here is simple: when traditional lenders tighten credit standards, alternative lenders smell opportunity.
Beware the “rate lock”
Mortgage borrowers are being warned about little-known “rate lock” fees that can appear during the home-loan process.
New analysis suggests some banks charge significantly more than others to secure an interest rate before settlement.
In theory the fee protects borrowers from rising rates. In practice it sometimes feels like paying insurance against the bank itself.
Broker power
Mortgage brokers continue to drive loan growth across the industry.
Resimac has reported rising originations fuelled heavily by broker distribution, while aggregator LMG is expanding its white-label residential lending offerings.
Translation: brokers remain the beating heart of Australia’s mortgage market. Banks may write the loans, but brokers increasingly decide who gets them.
Aussie’s star rises
Mortgage broker Aussie is heading to television with a new Foxtel campaign aimed at both buyers and sellers.
The marketing push highlights the increasingly competitive battle for borrowers in Australia’s mortgage market.
Financial Crime Crackdown
Summary
The week in one sentence: The RBA may raise rates again, banks are fighting AI scammers, hackers are stealing identity data, borrowers are under pressure, and non-bank lenders are quietly taking market share. In other words — just another exciting week on Money Road.




