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Still No Cheaper Mortgages

October 30th, 2008 by THE ARTICLES SHOWN ARE FOR INFORMATION ONLY AND DO NOT CONSTITUTE ADVICE OR RECOMMENDATION

No banks have collapsed for over a month and interest rates look set to come down next Thursday  so are cheaper mortgages just around the corner? Sadly not.

A few fixed-rate mortgages came down in response to the  recent base-rate cut, but tracker mortgages - the mortgages of choice during times of falling interest rates - are more expensive than they were this time last year, when the Bank of England base rate was 1.25 % higher than the current rate, of 4.5 per cent.

Last October the average rate on a tracker mortgage stood at 6.23 per cent, compared to 6.27% now, according to Moneyfacts.co.uk. Michelle Slade, one of its analysts, says: “Lenders are just not passing on cuts. They are factoring in a much bigger margin for risk than ever before and as a result mortgage rates remain high.”

The last time that the base rate was 4.5percent, borrowers could have obtained a rate of 4.25 per cent on a two-year tracker. Today the best rate on offer is 5.99percent. More than 30per cent of applications for loans worth more than 75percent are being declined by LloydsTSB, often because small details, such as a home phone number, have not been filled out. Such is the paranoia of banks.

Restrictions are becoming harsher still. Cheltenham&Gloucester has introduced a new fee for borrowers who want to move and rent out their homes by converting their mortgage into a buy-to-let loan. The wait for respite continues.

Posted in Mortgage news |

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