The Mortgage Decision Investors Should Treat Like Portfolio Allocation
For property investors, the cheapest mortgage rate is not always the best mortgage strategy. In a market where banks are adjusting fixed rates unevenly across different terms, the real decision is not simply where rates sit today. It is how much certainty, flexibility, and refinancing risk an owner is willing to carry.
Recent mortgage moves in New Zealand show why this matters. As reported by the NZ Herald, ASB has cut its three- to five-year fixed mortgage rates by 20 to 30 basis points, while increasing some shorter lending options. ANZ has also reduced one-, two-, and three-year fixed rates, including a one-year special rate at 4.65%, while Westpac has trimmed longer-term rates by 20 to 30 basis points.
For investors, this is more than a consumer borrowing story. It is a pricing signal. Banks are reacting to wholesale funding costs, swap-rate movement, and competitive pressure for loan growth. When longer-term rates fall while shorter terms become less straightforward, lenders are effectively inviting borrowers to consider locking in certainty beyond the next 12 months.
The mistake many borrowers make is anchoring to the lowest visible rate. That psychology was clear after Covid, when one- and two-year rates near 2.39% attracted attention while five-year money around 2.99% was often overlooked. In hindsight, the longer fix offered valuable protection. The lesson is not that five years is always right. It is that mortgage structure should be judged by expected average cost, risk tolerance, and investment horizon.
A mortgage should be managed like capital structure, not treated as a search for the lowest headline number.
Split lending remains one of the more practical tools for landlords and financially disciplined homeowners. By spreading debt across different fixed terms, borrowers reduce exposure to a single interest-rate decision date. This creates a form of interest-rate diversification, where part of the loan benefits if rates fall, while another portion protects cash flow if rates rise.
That matters for rental property portfolios in particular. Debt servicing is often the largest variable cost after tax and maintenance. A sharp repricing event can turn a marginally positive property into a cash-flow drain. Investors who rely only on short-term rates may retain flexibility, but they also accept more frequent exposure to market volatility.
The current market also suggests banks remain keen to write quality mortgage business. Advisers quoted by the NZ Herald noted that competition is showing up not only in rates, but also in cash contributions. For investors refinancing or purchasing, this creates room for negotiation. The headline rate is only one part of the deal. Contribution levels, break fees, loan structure, offset options, and repayment flexibility can all affect the true return.
The investment takeaway is clear. Borrowers should stop trying to pick the absolute bottom of the rate cycle and start modelling scenarios. If rates fall, what is the opportunity cost of fixing longer? If rates rise, what happens to net yield? If a property needs capital works or faces vacancy, how much repayment certainty is required?
In property, strong returns often come from avoiding avoidable pressure. A well-structured mortgage will not make a poor asset good, but it can protect a good asset through uncertain conditions. Investors should treat the current rate shifts as a prompt to review debt strategy before the next refinancing deadline, not after it arrives.
Source: NZ Herald


