Archive for the ‘Nationwide’ Category

Base rate falls while house prices rise

Friday, February 6th, 2009

The Bank of England cut interest rates to a new record low of 1% on Thursday. While the Halifax reported that house prices rose 1.9% during January. This is in contrast with Nationwide’s figures last week which showed 1.3% drop in house prices. As the credit-crunch has shown, the supply of finance has driven up house prices. There will be no full scale recovery in the UK property market until finance becomes easier to obtain, especially for first-time buyers. And with rising unemployment, who knows what the future will bring!

Government’s £500bn gamble

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

The Chancellor yesterday morning announce his £500bn banks bailout plan which will see some of the banks part-nationalised.  The plan consists of the following:

  • At least £200bn for short-term lending to banks to replace funds they normally borrow through the inter-bank market.
  • £25bn recapitalisation facility for Abbey, Barclays, HBOS, HSBC, Lloyds TSB, Nationwide, Royal Bank of Scotland and Standard Chartered to boost their balance sheet.  However, Abbey, HSBC and Standard Chartered have already declined the offer.
  • £25bn top-up fund if the first capitalisation proves inadequate.
  • £250bn government guarantee of bank bond issues - again to help shore up the banks’ strained balance sheets.

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Nationwide increases minimum deposit to 10%

Monday, April 28th, 2008

nationwide_logo.gifNationwide Building Society is today reducing its maximum loan to value ratio (LTV) to 90% on all of its products for new borrowers except its three-year fixed rate and three-year  tracker mortgages.  New borrowers will need at least 10% deposit on all their products except the two mentioned above.  New customers wanting to take out the group’s standard variable deal, which it calls its base mortgage rate, will now need a deposit of at least 25%, while the maximum amount the group will lend on any of its mortgages to new borrowers will be capped at £500,000.  The two remaining products that Nationwide is offering to people with a small deposit are only available by going direct to the lender and cannot be obtained through brokers.  Nationwide described the move, which takes effect from May 1, as part of its ‘ongoing approach of managing the business in a prudent and sustainable way’.

Lenders raise rates despite cut by the Bank

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

The Bank of England cut its base rate by o.25% to 5% on Thursday to stop the economy’s slide towards recession.  However, relief for home owners was instantly undermined by a new wave of mortgage rate increases from Britain’s biggest lenders.  Many lenders are yet to pass on the recent base rate reductions - instead they are busy increasing rates, demanding larger deposits, tightening lending criteria and, in some cases, withdrawing deals from the market altogether.  Most of the big lenders, including Halifax, Nationwide, the Woolwich, Cheltenham & Gloucester and First Direct also said within minutes of the Bank’s announcement that they will be cutting their standard variable mortgage rates by the full 0.25%.  Both Nationwide and Alliance & Leicester are believed to have been overwhelmed by applications from borrowers coming off cheap fixed deals and want to choke off the demand with yet another big increase of upto 0.35% in less than two weeks.  The increases followed similar moves from Woolwich, Halifax and Abbey.

Mortgage criteria getting tighter

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Several small building societies have been restricting or halting lending as a result of the financial turmoil.  With lenders’ funds drying up, higher deposits are being demanded from first-time buyers.  The Co-operative Bank now demands a higher deposit by cutting its maximum loan-to-value ratio from 95% to 90%.  Bigger lenders, such as the Halifax and the Woolwich, have slightly increased the interest rates on certain tracker or fixed-rate deals, while making other deals available only to those able to put down a 40% deposit.  The Cheltenham & Gloucester, part of Lloyds TSB, has also raised the interest rate charged on some deals.  More than a million fixed-rate deals, typically lasting for two years, are due to expire in 2008, which will add to demand.  As a result, the smaller building societies are withdrawing deals instead of being swamped by demand.  Those wishing to move house are being told to act fast on mortgage deals as lenders are changing their deals frequently, sometimes several times a week.
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