Posts Tagged ‘mortgage’

Abbey is new top UK mortgage lender

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

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Abbey has toppled Halifax as the UK’s biggest mortgage lender by taking more than a quarter of all business in the first six months of the year. Chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio said that while other lenders were withdrawing from the market, it was increasing mortgage lending to low-risk customers. However, he warned Abbey is unlikely to continue at such a rate for the rest of the year as other lenders return to the market. It came as Abbey, which is owned by Spanish giant Santander, reported a 20% rise in first-half profits to £485m. Santander, which has agreed to buy struggling Abbey rival Alliance & Leicester, said group profits jumped 22% to €4.73bn (£3.73bn).

Northern Rock offers first decent mortgage rate

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

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Northern rock has issued its first competitive mortgage rates since a run on the bank almost brought it to its knees last summer.  It has two-year fixed-rate loans that, while not the very best on the market, are good enough to bring in new customers. For buyers there is a rate of 6.39% and for remortgagers a rate of 6.49%.  Both have a £995 fee.  The lowest rates for two-year fixed deals are available from First Direct and Yorkshire BS.

Northern Rock has been trying to move existing customers to rivals since last September.  Its rates have got progressively more expensive as it tried to price itself out of the market to avoid taking on new business.  These new rates are not available for existing customers.  While these rates are not the very best, where they have a big advantage is that they are fully flexible, meaning you can overpay as much as you like without penalty.

More gloom stories from the property market

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

Property stocks pushed out of FTSE 100
House price slump ‘to last four years’
House prices to fall 9% in 2008
Housebuilders hit by gazundering
Barratt against wall as housing crisis grows
Axe hangs over 15,000 estate agents
4million pay mortgages with credit card
US ‘will beat UK’ out of the credit crunch
First-time buyers need a £32,500 deposit
Bad debt to keep growing, says HBOS

Lloyds TSB and Northern Rock in mortgage deal

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

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Lloyds TSB has struck a three-year deal to take on Northern Rock customers who are coming to the end of fixed rate mortgage deals.  Certain mortgage customers will be offered the opportunity to switch to a Lloyds from July.  The deal will assist Northern Rock in reducing the size of its balance sheet.  Lloyds has set a maximum loan to value ratio of about 80% for the mortgages it will take on, but it said this will be flexible.  The tax payers obviously have the rough end of the deal here - as Northern Rock which is now state owned will be left with the riskiest borrowers, just as housing repossessions are expected to rise.  Northern Rock itself warned last month that arrears were rising and shifting customers could become more difficult as the economy worsens and rivals cut back on lending.

Mortgage approval slumps as banks run out of cash

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

In a year, mortgages for people buying a home have dived by 46% as Britain’s banks run out of money to lend.  Figures from the British Bankers Association (BBA) showed mortgage approvals for house purchase in March tumbling to its lowest figure since records began in 1997.  This shows the extent to which banks are tightening their belts as they find themselves unable to secure funding for mortgages.  Borrowers needing to remortgage or purchase a home are finding lenders have raised rates to reflect their own higher borrowing costs and increase margins on mortgages.  Many are also demanding higher deposits to protect against house price falls and to raise the quality of their loan books.  The rising cost of securing funding on the money markets has seen the inter bank lending rate Libor rise to 0.9% above the bank rate of 5% - the historical average is 0.13%.  This has substantially pushed up the cost of new tracker rate mortgages, which are heavily influenced by Libor.  The BBA said it expected lending to continue to weaken due to the continuing decline in mortgage approvals.

£5k fee to take out your next mortgage

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Homeowners are facing fees of up to £5,000 to take out a mortgage.  A devastating report released yesterday shows that the average cost has almost doubled in a year. Interest rates charged by banks have also gone up.  Separate Government figures out yesterday brought further bad news in that house prices are falling at their fastest rate since records began.  After all the panic in the mortgage market, people may be tempted to grab the best headline rate deal but the fees must also be taken into consideration.  HSBC charges up to £5,000 for its recently introduced ‘Rate Matcher’ deal, which lets homeowners whose current fixed-rate deal is about to expire get the same rate with HSBC for another two years.  The mortgage meltdown continued yesterday with the number of deals available falling to just over 4,000 from 15,599 last summer.
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Halifax defies plea by PM and raises its loan rates

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

halifax_logo1.jpg Britain’s biggest mortgage lender today defied Gordon Brown’s plea to cut mortgage rates.  The Halifax is raising rates on some mortgage offers by 0.5% despite his calling bank chiefs to No10 to urge them to sign up to the Government’s strategy to tackle the global economic turmoil.  The Prime Minister was also bluntly warned that a string of building societies could be forced out of the mortgage market by the looming crisis.  Mr Brown is said to be prepared to offer banks help to raise funds but wants them to pass on interest rate cuts, do everything they can not to repossess the homes of people struggling to meet their mortgage payments, and to offer loans to first-time buyers.  The Bank of England is injecting a further £15bn of liquidity into the markets, taking its total recent support to more than £50bn. 

Bank cuts interest rates to 5.25%

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

The Bank of England cut interest rates on Thursday by a quarter point to 5.25 percent despite calls for a half-point cut.  The widely expected quarter point cut by the Central Bank was modest compared to the recent cuts made by the US Federal Reserve (1.25% points last month alone).  The Bank’s move will be welcomed by many mortgage borrowers, but homeowners who do not have a mortgage deal directly linked to the base rate may be disappointed as some lenders have been increasing their own rates in anticipation of a cut.  The decision by the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee comes as more evidence emerges of a slowdown in economic growth both in the UK and overseas.
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Many lenders failed to pass on rate cut

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

According to figures, eighteen of the 103 mortgage lenders failed to pass on any of last month’s interest rate cut, while sixteen reduced their rates by less than the full 0.25%.  However, many banks and building societies have taken the opportunity of the interest rate cut to reduce their savings by more than the 0.25% reduction in base rates. A total of 117 providers have so far cut their savings rates, with just 15 leaving them unchanged.  Alliance & Leicester has made the biggest reductions to its savings by slashing rates by up to 0.5%, while HSBC has reduced some accounts by up to 0.49%.  Britain’s biggest mortgage lender Halifax and Bradford & Bingley have both cut rates paid to savers by up to 0.4%, while a number of banks and building societies, including Britannia, Royal Bank of Scotland and NatWest, Yorkshire Bank and Sainsbury’s have decreased them by 0.3%.  Will another rate cut mean banks carry on cheating customers even more?
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Hope for US property market

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Reports on the US mortgage applications for last week showed a surge of 22.5% on the back of plunging interest rates.  Let hope that the US economy may not go into recession after all.  I’m a possitive thinker.  As the say, when America sneeze, the UK catches a cold.  Let hope that does happen.
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