Laine Gordon

Head of Public Relations

Laine Gordon is the Head of Public Relations at RateCity and an experienced journalist and research specialist. With a background in news and feature writing, covering finance, media and even food (a passion of hers) at Reed Elsevier publications, Laine brings almost two decades of experience to the team. Having covered major areas of interest to the general public from hip pocket issues to rising and falling interest rates and the impact to mortgages, credit and saving in Australia, she is passionate about researching and telling people’s stories to help others make better decisions about their own finances.

1021 articles written by Laine Gordon

/avoid-bank-fees-at-the-bpay-checkout
Bank Accounts

Avoid bank fees at the BPay checkout

Despite a stereotype that insists that generation Y is online savvy, new research points to the contrary when it comes to the under-thirties group's bill-paying habits on their transaction accounts.

/bank-s-ads-sway-unknowing-customers
Home Loans

Bank's ads sway unknowing customers

Just one month since launching an advertising campaign designed to distance itself from the other major banks, NAB has had a surge in account applications. Home loan enquiries soared by more than a third since the campaign was rolled out on February 14.

/how-to-think-like-a-home-owner-before-you-buy
Home Loans

How to think like a home owner before you buy

The next two years will likely see a spike in the number of first home buyers entering the market. Fed up with increasing rental prices, more than half of the 1000 prospective home buyers surveyed in the annual Future First Homebuyer Survey were looking to the property market for refuge.

/shop-to-chop-thousands-off-your-mortgage
Home Loans

Shop to chop thousands off your mortgage

Mortgage holders breathed a sigh of relief earlier this month when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) chose to hold the cash rate at 4.75 percent for the fourth consecutive month.

/the-ship-has-almost-sailed-for-fixed-home-loans
Home Loans

The ship has almost sailed for fixed home loans

If you're deciding whether to fix your home loan or go variable, the choice may have been made for you, with fixed interest rates on the rise. Fixed home loans are looking to be on their way up and many borrowers probably missed the boat on locking in a great fixed interest rate on their home loan.

/market-recovery-more-home-buyers-hitting-the-market
Home Loans

Market recovery More home buyers hitting the market

Mortgage applications in Australia may have hit their lowest point in eight years, but there are some indications a slow, upward climb has begun. Veda Advantage's quarterly Consumer Credit Demand Index found mortgage enquiries during the October to December 2010 quarter were up 3.4 percent compared with the September quarter.

/bank-wars-take-advantage-of-new-competition
Home Loans

Bank wars take advantage of new competition

With the home loan market heating up, the banking war can mean big savings for your home loan and other financial products.

/australians-look-toward-first-home-buyers-for-growth
Home Loans

Australians look toward first home buyers for growth

January Demand for newly built property has been leading the growth of home loans at the end of 2010, echoing the initial damage of the Brisbane floods. But with interest rates expected to climb this year, there are high hopes first home buyers will boost the market back into more lively days.

/how-car-insurance-can-turn-friends-into-frenemies
Car Insurance

How car insurance can turn friends into frenemies

Brothers, sisters, partners, friends, cousins, coworkers - these are just some of the people who might have a huge impact on the cost of your comprehensive car insurance this year, depending on who you allow to get behind your wheel.

/don-t-settle-for-average-save-36-000-on-your-home-loan
Home Loans

Don't settle for average save $36,000 on your home loan

Despite the lure of an ever-enticing $7000 First Home Owner Grant coupled with up to $19,500 worth of other grants on offer, the number of new Australian owner-occupier mortgages hit a 10-year low in 2010.