What do higher interest rates mean for you? - YouTube

Channel: CNBC International

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An entire generation of people is about to experience higher interest rates for the first time in their adult lives.
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Interest rates have been at historic lows since the global financial crisis – but
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they’re beginning to creep up.
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If you look at what’s happening around us today, we seem to have a situation that,
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I think, matches more what we saw 50 years ago.
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But what is an interest rate anyway, and what will this change mean for your life?
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Most people borrow money at some point in their lives – whether it’s to buy a house,
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a car, for education, or to start a business.
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But with interest rates on the rise, that’s about to become a lot more expensive.
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Here’s why.
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Let’s say you want to buy a car, but you’re short $20,000.
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An option a lot of people take is getting a loan from a lender like a bank or credit union.
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In this example, a bank has agreed to loan you the $20,000 for your car.
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But the bank isn’t going to give you that money for free.
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After all, there’s a chance you could not pay them back – or that the $20,000 will
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be worth less in the future because of inflation.
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So, you compensate the bank for the money.
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'Interest’ is what you're charged for the loan, usually represented by a percentage
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of the total amount borrowed. The higher the interest rate, the more you owe the bank.
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This is one of the main ways lenders make money.
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So, who decides whether interest rates are up or down? The answer is your local central bank.
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At a very basic level, the interest you pay the bank usually depends on a few things:
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How likely it is that you will pay the debt,
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how long it takes for you to repay the money and
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your central bank’s interest rates, and where they may head in the future.
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You see, a central bank is a bank for banks.
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If it raises interest rates, it makes it more expensive for your bank to borrow money.
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If the central bank lowers rates, it's the opposite.
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And that works its way out to the economy - and to you and your car loan.
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Central banks such as the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of England use interest rates
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to try to manage the economy.
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And for the first time in more than three years, both central banks raised their interest rates.
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A number of countries have also raised their interest rates in the last six months, including
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South Korea, India, New Zealand and Brazil.
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But why?
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As the pandemic devastated markets and slowed economic growth, many central banks made aggressive interest rate cuts.
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This lowered the cost of taking loans, which in turn spurred consumer spending and encouraged big credit purchases.
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Now, with demand recovering and supply chains affected by the pandemic and the Ukraine war, inflation has gone up.
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This time round, we got this perfect storm of both supply disruption and rising wealth
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that is creating this very bad inflationary situation.
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Lee Boon Keng worked in the finance industry for 15 years and is now a banking and finance professor in Singapore.
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Inflation is caused by what we call excess demand, whether your excess demand is caused
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by falling supply or rising demand, it’s still excess demand.
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A lot of people were thinking the pandemic will be more damaging, economically.
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The fact that there were a lot of government injections into the economy, has somewhat
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lifted everyone, and that creates what I call wealth effect. We got geopolitical crisis.
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We got China, which is literally the manufacturers of the world, deciding that they need to have
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zero-Covid, and therefore it’s shutting down.
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So, this is a very bad concoction.
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Rightfully, policymakers should be acting in a way to tame inflation.
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And the main tool central banks have is interest rates.
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Raising interest rates has historically slowed economic growth and reduced inflation.
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High interest rate was somewhat transitory in the past.
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They somehow managed to tame it quite easily, and that is a phenomenon that we've seen easily
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for the last 35 years.
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Unfortunately, this time, what we're seeing is a period where inflation seems to be a
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little bit more structural.
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We’ve gone into a time where we sit back, look back in history and couldn’t find a
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time that is familiar to us, that we can relate to, and I think that’s the fundamental problem.
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And that – what I call – policy hesitancy has kind of caught the entire system by surprise.
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A lot of policymakers have been hesitant to react more structurally, more aggressively
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to the current situation.
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What would be the adverse impact on the average consumer who is experiencing high interest rates right now?
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You want to buy your big-ticket items, those are going to be more expensive.
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If you were borrowing money to run your business by borrowing cost, it’s also going to be on the rise.
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It’s not a situation for you to really go all out in terms of ramping up your loans and all these things
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so that you can take advantage of rising real estate prices and all these things.
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It’s really about investing within what you’re comfortable at.
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But it’s not all bad news.
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Higher interest rates can be good for your savings.
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Banks incentivize customers to save their money with them by offering to pay you interest.
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It seems like a good deal.
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You make money for parking your cash in a savings account.
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But generally, the earnings from these accounts for the last decade and a half have been minimal.
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And many people are choosing to put their extra money in riskier places –
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like investing in stocks or crypto – instead.
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This shift in policy could change that.
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So I started working about 10-ish years ago, and interest rates have always been really low since then.
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Millennials are in our life stage where we are spending on really the big-ticket items in our lives.
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Dinesh Dayani is the co-founder of Dollars & Sense, a personal finance portal based in Singapore.
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You can continue investing, continue putting the bulk of your investments into maybe fixed
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deposits, maybe hopefully, with rising interest rates, they rise a little bit as well.
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So, you can eat back a little bit on inflation.
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But I don't think it's going to be easy for someone who is retiring today and need a very
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safe basket of investments on their portfolio.
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So, if you want to invest, invest through low-cost brokerages.
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And then I mention credit cards.
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We don't really get cashback for credit cards.
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But you know when we sign up for credit cards, we tend to get a lot of perks as well.
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So we can spend a bit smarter as well.
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Recently I even actually signed up for this BNPL option.
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BNPL stands for ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ and it’s an increasingly popular payment method
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for consumers to purchase an item and pay for it in future installments, usually without interest.
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I was literally at the store already buying something and then the store cashier or owner
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told me that hey, if you sign up for this, you get instantly 20% off.
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Like, 30% off. Exactly.
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I think we have to be prudent here because on one hand we can spend more than we realize
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by using some of these options.
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But if we're spending prudently and using this to offset only the cost that we're already
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going to incur, that's another way that we can lower expenses for ourselves.
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We are in the repeat of the 70s where inflation is going to be persistently high at least for the next two years.
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We have to brace ourselves for a recession.
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Diversify. Look at your finances.
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Make sure that you’re not overextended.
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My recommendation to a lot of people right now, make sure you hold your job.
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Your job is very important to combat inflation.
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There is this thing called the Great Resignation that’s going on.
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A lot of people think that look, I go out there, if I quit my job today, I find another
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job with X percentage increase in pay.
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But once a certain tipping point happens, you will be what we call ‘last in, first out’.
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Inflation is just a good excuse slash chance to relook the non-discretionary basket and
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rethink what we're spending on.
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There is no other way to end this inflation, given that supply chain disruption in the
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background, besides demand destruction, and demand destruction can only be achieved by
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very, very tight monetary policy.
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And that includes high interest rates.
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Yes, and that includes high interest rate, very high interest rate.