Posts Tagged ‘tracker’

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.

Has the Bank of England lost control?

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Some are questioning whether the financial turmoil has rendered the Bank of England powerless to direct how much the biggest financial names on the High Street charge for credit and pay customers for their deposits.  For many, today’s predicted cut in base rate will be meaningless.  While banks and building societies have been cutting savings rates, they have also been raising mortgage rates for new borrowers.  The only people to benefit would be existing mortgage customers on the track rates which follows the movement of the base rate.  The current market turmoil could however be providing banks and building societies with the opportunity to rebuild their profit margins after being hit (at various levels) by the subprime market.  Once again, the consumers are paying for the cost of the financial industries’ imprudence.