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Signs the mortgage market is steadying as fixed rates remain static

Average two- and five-year fixed mortgage rates have held steady for four days in a row, in signs that the home loans market could be steadying following the turmoil seen in recent weeks.

Across all deposit sizes, the average rate offered on a two-year fixed-rate mortgage has now remained the same for four days, at 6.47%, figures from Moneyfacts.co.uk show.

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The average five-year fixed-rate mortgage rate on the market has also remained the same for four days in a row, standing at 6.29% between Friday last week and Monday.

The choice of mortgages has also remained broadly static in recent days, with 3,104 mortgage products available on Monday, which was slightly down on the 3,112 deals available on Friday last week.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

Average mortgage rates shot up in the days following the mini-budget as lenders pulled deals from sale and repriced their rates upwards.

The number of mortgage products dropped to 2,258 at the start of October, having stood at 3,961 on the day of the mini-budget.

Source: Dunfermline Press

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How to understand what’s going on with UK mortgage rates

The UK mortgage market has tightened as confidence in the economy has faltered in recent weeks. Lenders withdrew more than 1,600 homeloan products after the (then) chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s September mini-budget sent the UK economy into a tailspin.

Rates on the mortgage products that are still available have risen to record levels – average two-year and five-year fixed rates have now passed 6% for the first time since 2008 and 2010 respectively.

The Bank of England has intervened to try to calm the situation. But this help currently has an end date of Friday 14 October, after which it’s unclear what will happen in the financial markets that influence people’s mortgage rates.

This is a crucial issue for a lot of people: 28% of all dwellings are owned with a loan, with mortgage payments eating up about a sixth of household income, on average.

Looking at how the market has developed over time can help to explain how we got here and where we are going – which is basically headfirst into a period of high interest rates, low loan approvals and plateauing house prices.

All financial markets are driven by information, confidence and cash. Investors absorb new information which feeds confidence or drives uncertainty, and then they choose how to invest money. As the economy falters, confidence erodes and the interest rates that banks must pay to access funding in financial markets – which influence mortgage rates for borrowers – become unpredictable.

Banks do not like such uncertainty and they do not like people defaulting on their loans. Rising interest rates and uncertainty increase their risk, reduce the volume of mortgage sales and place downward pressure on their profits.

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How banks think about risk
Once you understand this, predicting bank behaviour in the mortgage market becomes a lot easier. Take the period before the global financial crisis of 2008 as an example. In the early 1990s, controls over mortgage lending were relaxed so that, by the early 2000s, mortgage product innovation was a firm trend.

This led to mortgages being offered for 125% of a property’s value, and banks lending people four times their annual salary (or more) to buy a home and allowing self-employed borrowers to “self-certify” their incomes.

The risks were low at this time for two reasons. First, as mortgage criteria became more liberal, it brought more money into the market. This additional money was chasing the same supply of houses, which increased house prices. In this environment, even if people defaulted, banks could easily sell on repossessed houses and so default risks were less of a concern.

Second, banks began to offload their mortgages into the financial markets at this time, passing on the risk of default to investors. This freed up more money for them to lend out as mortgages.

The Bank of England’s base rate also dropped throughout this period from a high of 7.5% in June 1998 to a low of 3.5% in July 2003. People desired housing, mortgage products were many and varied, and house prices were rising – perfect conditions for a booming housing market. Until, of course, the global financial crisis hit in 2008.

The authorities reacted to the financial crisis by firming up the mortgage rules and going back to basics. This meant increasing the capital – or protection – that banks had to hold against the mortgages they had on their books, and strengthening the rules around mortgage products. In essence: goodbye self-certification and 125% loans, hello lower income multiples and bulked-up bank balance sheets.

The upshot of these changes was fewer people could qualify to borrow to buy a home, so average UK house prices dropped from more than £188,000 in July 2007 to around £157,000 in January 2009. The damage was so deep that they had only partially recovered some of these losses to reach £167,000 by January 2013.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

New constraints
Of course, prices have boomed again more recently. This is partly because banks had slowly started to relax, although with less flexibility and more regulation than before the global financial crisis. This reduction in flexibility cut product choice, but low interest rates and low monthly payments have encouraged individuals to take on more debt and banks to grant more mortgages.

Availability of loans fuels house prices so the cycle starts again, although within a more regulated market this time. But the result has been largely the same: average house prices have risen to just shy of £300,000 and the total value of gross mortgage lending in the UK has grown from £148 billion in 2009 to £316 billion by 2021.

But when new information hit the markets – starting with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine earlier this year – everything changed and confidence tanked. The resulting supply-side constraints and spiking fuel prices have stoked inflation. And the very predictable response of the Bank of England has been to increase interest rates.

Why? Because increasing interest rates is supposed to stop people spending and encourage them to save instead, taking the heat out of the economy. However, this rise in interest rates, and therefore monthly mortgage payments, is happening at a time when people’s disposable income is already being drastically reduced by rising fuel prices.

Mortgage market outlook
So what of the mortgage markets going forward? The present economic situation, while completely different from that of the 2008 financial crisis, is borne of the same factor: confidence. The political and economic environment – the policies of the Truss administration, Brexit, the war in Ukraine, rising fuel costs and inflation – has shredded investor confidence and increased risk for banks.

In this environment, banks will continue to protect themselves by tightening product ranges while increasing mortgage rates, deposit sizes (or loan-to-values) and the admin fees they charge. Loan approvals are already falling and cheap mortgages have rapidly disappeared.

Demand for homeloans will also keeping falling as would-be borrowers are faced with a reduced product range as well as rising loan costs and monthly payments. Few people make big financial decisions when uncertainty is so high and confidence in the government is so low.

Optimistically, the current situation will cause UK house prices to plateau, but given the continued uncertainty arising from government policy, it’s realistic to expect falls in certain areas as financial market volatility continues.

Source: The Conversation

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Fixed mortgage rates continue to climb above 6% as choice of products improves

Average fixed mortgage rates are continuing to climb, pushing up costs for borrowers.

Earlier this week, the average two-year fixed-rate deal topped 6% for the first time in 14 years and the average five-year fixed rate hit 6% for the first time in 12 years, according to data from Moneyfacts.co.uk.

Moneyfacts said on Friday that, across all deposit sizes, the average two-year fixed-rate mortgage on the market is 6.16%, having edged up from 6.11% on Thursday and 6.07% on Wednesday.

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The average five-year fixed-rate mortgage is now 6.07%, having been 6.02% on Thursday and 5.97% on Wednesday.

Many deals disappeared from the market amid the fallout from the recent mini-budget. Bank of England base rate hikes in recent months, amid soaring inflation, have also had an impact.

Moneyfacts previously calculated that, based on Thursday’s rates, someone with a £200,000 mortgage, paying it back over 25 years could end up paying around £5,000 per year more for a two-year fixed-rate deal than they would have done last December.

Across the market, the choice of mortgage products is gradually increasing after contracting sharply last week.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

Moneyfacts counted 2,533 products on Friday, up from 2,430 on Thursday.

The total is still significantly down from 3,961 on the day of the mini-budget.

Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank, said: “We may see mortgage rates fall to some extent if financial markets become more reassured by the Government’s economic plan, but the events of the last fortnight have been a reminder that the era of ultra-low rates is coming to an end.”

Source: The Impartial Reporter

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Biggest mortgage lender increases rates on deals for new borrowers

The UK’s largest mortgage lender says it will increase rates on Wednesday as the cost of new fixed rate deals continues to climb.

The Halifax, part of Lloyds Banking Group, will put up the interest rates on a range of deals for new borrowers to well over 5%.

“On October 5, we’ll be updating the rates on our homebuyer mortgage range,” a spokesperson for the Halifax told STV News.

“We continue to have a range of fixed-rate product terms available up to 95% LTV (loan-to-value). The new rates reflect the continued increase in mortgage market pricing over recent weeks.”

The Halifax’s decision means its rate for a two-year fixed deal for a customer offering a 25% deposit is up from 4.61% to 5.84%.

A five-year fix with the same deposit will stand at 5.44% from Wednesday and a ten-year fix at 5.34%.

Many leading British banks are re-entering the mortgage market with interest rates of almost 6%, after halting new fixed-rate home loans last week.

Four days ago, the rate was 5.43% and at the start of December it was 2.34%.

Barclays, Skipton Building Society, NatWest, Virgin Money and Nationwide are among the lenders to increase their rates on new mortgage deals after chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s raft of tax cuts prompted concerns for the impact on inflation.

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1.8m fixed rates to end
Last month, the Halifax temporarily withdrew from the market all of its mortgage products that come with a fee amid continuing volatility surrounding the pound.

Several other lenders – including Virgin Money and Skipton – also pulled products from the market.

With mortgage rates generally on the rise, alongside other household bills, and many mortgage products having recently vanished from the market, more people may find it a struggle to keep up with their payments in the months ahead.

While the majority of mortgage holders are on fixed-rate deals, 1.8 million fixed deals are scheduled to end next year – meaning some homeowners could be in for a bill shock when they do eventually come to take out a new mortgage.

The interest rate on a new, average two-year fixed deal has risen consistently since Kwarteng’s mini-budget.

On the morning of the speech on Friday, September 23 it was 4.74%. Now, it is 5.97%. A five-year fixed deal has typically risen from 4.75% to 5.75% over the same period.

‘Weakest start to month’
October has seen the weakest start to the month for mortgage product choice in more than 12 years, according to financial information website Moneyfacts.co.uk.

Some 2,258 residential mortgage products were available on Saturday October 1, the lowest figure for the first day of a new month since May 2010 when 2,087 deals were available, it said.

Lenders pulled mortgage products from sale in large quantities last week amid market turmoil following the mini-budget.

On the first day of September this year, there had been 3,890 mortgage products for sale.

By Monday this week, there had been a slight improvement compared with Saturday, with 2,262 mortgage products to choose from.

Rachel Springall, a finance expert at Moneyfacts.co.uk said: “Borrowers may be concerned to see a further fall in mortgage availability, but many lenders have been very vocal that their withdrawals are on a temporary basis amid interest rate uncertainty.

“Seeking advice from an independent broker would be wise, especially for those borrowers who have not yet started the mortgage process and are deterred from the level of choice and much higher mortgage rates than they were perhaps anticipating.

“The next few weeks will be crucial to see where lenders go from here, but we have already seen some new fixed deals arrive since last week.”

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

Government pledges
Prime Minister Liz Truss said on Tuesday the UK Government will do “what we can” to support households over the coming months, amid growing concerns about the pressure rising interest rates will put on millions of people across the country.

She also insisted that her government would help households through the cost-of-living crisis, but also pointed to her and the Chancellor’s dash for growth as the antidote to some of the problems facing the country.

But Truss, who in recent days has been forced into two major U-turns amid backbench outcry over Kwarteng’s mini-budget, offered no specific reassurances for households who could be facing a steep rise in interest rates in the weeks and months to come.

Asked if the UK Government might be able to help struggling households, she acknowledged that people were “worried” about the cost of living and rising inflation, but once again said that interest rates were a decision for the Bank of England.

There is an expectation that the Bank of England could feel compelled to step in with another interest rate rise in the weeks to come, following the Chancellor’s mini-budget last month, in order to further calm the markets.

Such a move would only add further pressure to homeowners and those trying to buy a house.

Truss said: “We’re also doing what we can to help homeowners through stamp duty reductions [in England].

“The reality is, though, that interest rates are set by the independent Bank of England. They make those decisions on the basis of what’s happening with inflation and other factors.

“That’s why we have acted decisively on the energy price guarantee. We’re also doing what we can to help homeowners through stamp duty reductions. The reality is, though, that interest rates are set by the independent Bank of England.

“They make those decisions on the basis of what’s happening with inflation and other factors.”

By Kevin Scott

Source: STV News

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What’s Happening With UK Mortgage Rates?

The Bank of England raised interest rates in September from 1.75% to 2.25%. The 0.5 percentage point increase marks the seventh rise since December 2021 when Bank rate stood at just 0.1%. It also puts Bank rate at its highest level for 14 years.

Interest rate rises, as well as sterling volatility and market uncertainty, is pushing up the cost of mortgages. Lenders including NatWest, TSB, Santander, Halifax, Virgin Money and Skipton Building Society have pulled or repriced mortgage deals upwards since last week, and more are likely to follow.

With events changing on a daily basis, it’s important to keep calm and objective. Here’s some more detail on How To Ride Out The Mortgage Storm.

Interest rates, mortgages…
So what do climbing interest rates mean for the cost of mortgages?

The estimated two million homeowners on variable rate deals, such as base rate trackers, will see an almost immediate rise in their monthly repayments following the recent Bank rate rise to 2.25%. As an example, a tracker rate rising from 3.5% to 4% will cost almost an extra £60 a month on a £200,000 loan.

Remortgagers and first-time buyers will also be faced with higher mortgage costs when they come to source a deal, with the cost of new fixed rates having already factored the latest rise into the price.

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… house prices and Stamp Duty
As well as more expensive mortgages, those looking to buy or move home are grappling with rising property prices. The average cost of a property coming to the market increased by 0.7% in September (£2,587) to £367,760, according to Rightmove. Annually, average asking prices were 8.7% higher in September than a year ago.

However, Stamp Duty cuts announced in last month’s Mini Budget – which raised the nil-rate band on the purchase of a property from £125,000 to £250,000 – means that a third (33%) of all homes listed on Rightmove are now exempt from the tax.

Fixed rate mortgages
More and more homeowners are opting for longer-term fixed mortgages in a bid for stability in the face of continued rising interest rates and economic uncertainty. But while, historically, borrowers would pay more to fix in for longer, the price gap is closing.

According to mortgage broker Trussle, the top interest rate on a no-fee 75% loan-to-value fixed rate mortgage is now 4.45% over two years or 4.55% over five years. Over 10 years, the cheapest no-fee fix is currently 5.39%. Refer to our mortgage tables below for what deals are available today for your deposit level and circumstances.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

Why are interest rates rising?
The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) uses interest hikes as a means of cooling the economy and taming rising inflation. The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure of inflation already stands at a heady 9.9% in the 12 months to August against a government target of 2%.

And with the pound falling dramatically on the international currency markets last week, there are fears that inflation could continue to balloon, prompting the Bank of England to hike rates to as high as 6% from their current 2.25% by next year.

The Bank’s MPC is scheduled to next meet on 3 November to decide on interest rates. However, depending on what happens in the markets and wider economy, there is a possibility that an ’emergency rate rise’ could happen sooner, although the Bank has suggested this is unlikely.

One of the main longer-term drivers behind rising inflation is the cost of energy. The government has intervened by replacing the energy price cap – which had been due to send energy prices soaring to over £3,500 a year from 1 October – with a cheaper Energy Price Guarantee.

This will limit the cost of typical-use household bills to £2,500 a year for two years, with an additional £400 automatic discount applied to electricity bills for every household between October 2022 and March 2023.

What are today’s mortgage rates?
With upwardly-mobile Bank and inflation rates, keeping track of mortgage costs is challenging – especially right now when rates change, and deals can be pulled, on a daily basis.

By Laura Howard

Source: Forbes

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Mortgage lenders confident in economic outlook

Mortgage lenders are in a better position currently than they have been during previous financial shocks, a member of the Bank of England’s financial policy committee has said.

During a speech last week, Dame Colette Bowe, external member of the committee and former chair of the UK Banking Standards Board, reiterated the BoE’s position that the current shock being experienced by the financial system does not pose the same threat as previous shocks.

Speaking at Bayes Business School for a research workshop on the future of financial mutuals, Bowe gave an overview of the FPC’s view on household indebtedness and the BoE’s mortgage market tools and how they relate to financial stability.

Referencing the interplay between mortgage debt and financial stability that characterised the 2008 global financial crisis, Dame Bowe said it was important to remember the role mortgage debt and lender resilience play in financial stability.

“Unsustainably high mortgage debt has historically affected UK financial stability via two channels. The first is through the effect on borrower resilience, where highly indebted households face challenges from real income cuts and/or mortgage rate increases and cut spending sharply – which can amplify a downturn, with potentially systemic consequences for financial stability,” Bowe said.

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“Second, shocks can be transmitted to financial stability through the lender resilience channel, where lenders experience losses when highly indebted households face re-payment difficulties. These losses can result in a reduction of the supply of credit to households, businesses and the wider economy.”

Bowe added the BoE maintains its position that the current shock “does not at this stage pose the same risks to lenders and the financial system as previous shocks” but that the PFC continues to monitor the resilience of banks to further downside risks.

“Lenders are well capitalised and have limited direct exposures to Russia and Ukraine, as well as being resilient to risks stemming from sectors which are particularly exposed to higher commodity prices,” Bowe said.

Yorkshire Building Society director of mortgages, Ben Merritt agreed with Bowe and said he was confident that the industry will weather the current conditions.

Merritt said: “Whilst we accept that the current economic conditions are quite unique and will likely have a significant impact for a long time to come, the regulatory environment and the resilience of the financial services sector provides us with confidence that the industry will weather these conditions.

“We regularly assess the market outlook, conducting thorough stress testing, and we remain confident in our position as a safe and secure financial organisation”.

This sentiment was also echoed by Natwest’s chair and former deputy governor of the Bank of England, Sir Howard Davies.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

Commenting on rising energy costs and the economic outlook last week, Davies told BBC Radio 4 that “it’s important we do not talk ourselves into a worse situation than we are actually in”.

“The economy is not in that bad of shape. We’ve seen at the bank that consumer spending has been fairly robust. People’s deposits, and deposits of customers in banks have actually still gone up in the first half of this year, and we are not seeing significant distress in the mortgage market,” Davies said.

Later this month, the FPC will launch its annual cyclical scenario stress test, which will assess the UK banking system’s resilience to deep simultaneous recession, real income shocks as well as large falls in asset prices and higher global interest rates.

But Bowe pointed out that the FPC is also conscious of less severe scenarios and the pressure the rise in living costs and interest rates will put on UK households over the coming months.

“This will test the degree of borrower resilience in the system as borrowers struggle with bills or [to] manage their other spending commitments,” Bowe said.

By Jane Matthews

Source: FT Adviser

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Bank of England to suspend market operations for State funeral

The BoE said CHAPS will be closed on 19th September, in line with its normal bank holiday arrangements.

CHAPS handled around 174,000 payments each day, in the year to February 2021, with an average payment value of £2.1m. That works out at around £367bn each working day.

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CHAPS is used by banks and large corporations to settle high-value money market and foreign exchange transactions, by companies to pay taxes, and by solicitors and conveyancers to settle property transactions.

The Bank’s Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) service, which underpins large transfers between bank accounts, will also be closed.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

Back in 2014, RTGS collapsed for most of a day, putting thousands of housing market transactions on hold.

Last week the BoE said the sale of corporate bonds held by the Asset Purchase Facility will be delayed by a week, to 26 September, following its decision to delay its next interest rate decision by a week (to 22nd September).

Source: London Loves Business

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Mortgage interest rates are signalling a return to lower inflation

Anybody who has been looking at mortgages recently may have noticed something surprising. If you want a two-year fixed-rate mortgage on a 60% loan-to-value, you could get 3.82% from First Direct, for example. However, if you want a five-year fix, you’d pay 3.58% at the same lender – ie, a lower rate. And if you’re going for a ten-year fix, the offer is 3.83% – only 0.01 percentage point more than the two-year.

I’m using First Direct here because it’s a clean example of the point – the terms across its mortgages are similar and there aren’t huge differences in early redemption charges or other nuances. But the same applies at many other lenders as well.

This is really not what you would expect. The basic principle behind a yield curve is that lenders expect higher rates for lending for a longer period. Occasionally yield curves on government bonds may be very flat or even invert slightly, but such a small difference between the five-year and ten-year rates on mortgages is uncommon. I reckon the gap of about 0.25 percentage points in the example is about one-third of what it’s been over the longer term.

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Pricing in a return to lower inflation
So what’s going on? You can see the answer pretty clearly if you look at what’s called the overnight index swap (OIS) forward curve, the data for which can be found on the Bank of England website. The OIS forward curve is essentially the forecast for what interest rates will be at a given point in the future. They are not the interest rate for lending for that long – they are simply what the rate is predicted to be at that point, implied from market pricing of interest-rate derivatives.

Thus the Bank of England OIS forward curve now suggests that interest rates will be at around 4.5% in the middle of next year. That’s a sharp rise from what it was implying just a month ago (around 2.5%-3%) and vastly up on expectations of around 1.5% six months ago. But the curve then predicts that rates will drop back sharply and will be around 3% by late 2025. That’s also up on forecasts from a month ago – when rates were expected to be 2% in 2025 – but has gone up by much less than expectations for rates next year.

That’s the explanation for why mortgage rates look so back-to-front: the market expects much lower long-term rates, and so loans for longer periods are pricing that in. This may happen – or it could suggest that markets are being too slow to recognise whether we are moving from a low-inflation/low-rate regime to one where both are at more historically normal levels.

Read about the UK Housing Market via our Specialist Residential & Buy to Let Division

We won’t know for a while, but if markets are wrong, this will have huge consequences for the pricing of all sorts of assets. However, for anybody looking for long-term mortgage security, the gap between five-year and ten-year rates looks notably low – and might not last much longer if expectations change.

By Cris Sholto Heaton

Source: Money Week

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Need a new mortgage next year? Lock into a low-cost rate today

Banks are increasingly allowing mortgage borrowers to lock into a new deal earlier to keep their business and discourage them from switching lender.

Millions of fixed-rate deals are coming to an end over the next 15 months and after six consecutive Bank of England interest rate rises since last December homeowners are getting their skates on.

“We regularly get calls from homeowners whose mortgages finish in a year’s time and they want to know what’s happening to rates,” said Aaron Strutt from the mortgage broker Trinity Financial. “They ask how they can lock into a new deal early and how much it’s going to cost for them to get out of their current deal.

“Lenders are making it easier to switch early so borrowers can lock into the current rates. With the scale of price hikes from the biggest lenders, prices will be much more expensive in a few months.”

Usually, there’s a mismatch between how early you can secure a deal with a different lender and when you can remortgage with your existing lender, in what is known as a product transfer. You can secure a new deal elsewhere up to six months before your current deal ends but a product transfer is normally only allowed up to three months early.

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Nearly 70 per cent of all remortgaging deals involved a product transfer in the first three months of this year, according to banking trade body UK Finance.

With mortgage rates having risen rapidly since the end of last year, borrowers want to lock in new rates as soon as they can before rates go up further. In January the average rate on a two-year fix was 2.52 per cent and on the average five-year fix it was 2.71 per cent, according to Moneyfacts; now they are 4.24 per cent and 4.33 per cent respectively.

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There were 329,510 remortgages approved between January and July, according to the Bank of England, up 36 per cent on the same period last year.

Last Thursday, Barclays told existing borrowers they can secure a new rate with the bank five months before their current deal ends, up from three months. The previous week, HSBC increased its switch window from three months before a deal ends to four, and in July NatWest increased its window from four to six months.

This is especially good news for borrowers who may fall foul of tighter affordability criteria and be unable to borrow as much from a different lender because they will always be able to switch products at their current bank.

By George Nixon

Source: The Times

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I could have fixed my mortgage rate for years longer. I’m a fool

I have been having flashbacks. Not the kind I used to have, of when I went hiking in Yosemite National Park without a map and ended up sliding down a bear-infested trail on my backside in the dark. No, these flashbacks relate to a time in my more recent life, and an ill-fated conversation with my mortgage broker in July last year that led to a severe financial misjudgment.

My wife and I had just sold our house while juggling careers and three small children, and it was time to choose a mortgage for the new one. Should we take a two-year fixed-rate deal or a five-year one?

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The five-year mortgage was with Santander, and the two-year with the West Brom building society. Both had interest rates of just over 1.2 per cent, and our broker pushed for the two-year deal. The Bank of England base rate was 0.1 per cent, and he said he would be stunned if the base rate or mortgage prices went up significantly by summer 2023, when we’d be due to renew. Plus (and after this week’s 0.5 percentage point rate rise, this is makes me squirm the most) he reckoned being stuck with a five-year deal and its hefty early repayment charge was the riskier option.

The clincher was that the West Brom would lend us £40,000 more than Santander would because it had a more relaxed affordability calculation, and we wanted that money — the place needed some work. It was an interest-only mortgage, which appealed because the repayments would be low while my wife was temporarily out of work. The two-year deal it was.

Fast forward a year and . . . yes, I know, I’m an idiot.

Since we took out our mortgage the base rate has risen six times, now sitting at 1.75 per cent. It is heading in only one direction, and could be as high as 3 per cent when our two-year fix term ends.

Lenders, of course, follow the base rate when setting their rates. According to the data firm Moneyfacts, the average two-year fixed-rate deal has gone from 2.55 per cent to 3.74 per cent since we took out our loan, and the average five-year fixed rate is up from 2.78 per cent to 3.89 per cent. Next summer we may be offered 4 per cent, which could mean paying £1,000 more each month than we do now.

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So what can we do about it? Work is about to begin on the downstairs of our house, and it’s becoming ever more expensive because of inflation — we’ve now scaled back our plans and are leaving a tumbledown garage in place. We’ll mitigate the impact of our bigger future mortgage payments by setting aside money each month, and perhaps overpaying on our existing deal. We’ll burn through our savings.

However, for many borrowers coming off fixed rates next year, the prospect of a deal at a much higher rate is going to trigger a “payment shock”, as the broker Andrew Montlake puts it. Of course, at this time of pandemic, war, rising inflation and heatwaves, planning anything is difficult — from when to remortgage to how often to water the garden. I’ll be far from alone in facing nasty flashbacks over the coming months.

By DAVID BYERS

Source: The Times