Good news for fixed-rate and self-cert mortgagers

”Good

Mortgage Broker John Charcol estimates that last week’s decision by the Bank of England to keep the base rate at 5.5% will be costing UK homeowners with variable rate mortgages a total of £105 million per month in mortgage interest payments.

However, Ray Boulger, the firm’s spokesman, points out that the news is not entirely bad because borrowers looking for a fixed-rate mortgage can benefit from a drop in the London Interbark Offered Rate (Libor), the rate at which banks lend to one another.

According to Mr Boulger, “The Bank Rate/Libor spread has narrowed sharply over the last couple of weeks, as has the gilt-yield/swap rate spread, albeit to a lesser extent, and this is an encouraging sign for an easing of the liquidity squeeze.”

In addition, the credit squeeze does not appear to have had a strongly detrimental affect on the self-certification mortgage market, which does not require proof of income.

This type of loan is often applied for through a broker and Andy Pratt, spokesperson for mortgage broker Alexander Hall, states: “most customers in that circumstance need a bit of guidance as a lot of the lenders are not High Street lenders.”

In his opinion, there has been no fundamental change to the UK self-cert mortgage market since the credit squeeze began.


Comments (0)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

There are no comments yet. Why not be the first to speak your mind.

Leave a Reply


Visited 1502 times, 1 so far today