Grainne Gilmore
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More than half of mortgage lenders have failed to pass on this month’s interest rate cut in full to homeowners or to guarantee that they will.
The Bank of England cut the base rate by a quarter-point two weeks ago, but more than 30 of the 86 biggest lenders in the UK have yet to say whether they will cut their standard variable rate (SVR), according to a report from Moneysupermarket.com, the financial website.
A further 14 mortgage providers have failed to pass on the full cut to customers.
Alliance & Leicester cut its rate by 0.2 percentage points to 7.69 per cent, while Northern Rock reduced its SVR by only 0.15 percentage points to 7.69 per cent.
The reluctance to cut rates will be a blow to homeowners already struggling with higher utility bills and mortgage payments after five interest rate rises since August 2006.
Nearly 20 per cent of borrowers took out a deal pegged at or linked to their lender’s SVR last year, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML).
Experts say that banks are dragging their heels about passing on the rate cut as they struggle to cope with higher borrowing costs as a result of the credit crunch. Only 18 lenders have cut their SVR.
Melanie Bien, director at Savills Private Finance, the independent mortgage broker, said: “Lenders are struggling to improve margins on the back of the liquidity crisis and the fact that the Libor — the rate at which they borrow from each other — is much higher than the base rate.
"Not passing on the full rate reduction is an easy way of doing this.”
The delaying tactics came to light as the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors predicted that the number of home repossessions would soar by 50 per cent to 45,000 next year.
The CML said gross mortgage lending slumped nearly 8 per cent last month to its lowest since July 2005.
Louise Cuming, head of mortgages at Moneysupermarket, said: “It is very disappointing to see cuts of only 0.14 to 0.2 percentage points being passed on in many cases.”
At the beginning of December the average SVR was 7.57 per cent.
Despite the quarter-point rate cut, the average is now only 0.12 percentage points lower at 7.45 per cent.
Dominic Eaves, of Alliance & Leicester, said: “We look at a number of factors when deciding a new SVR, of which the base rate is only one.”
The CML said it was wrong to assume that there was a link between base rates and mortgage rates.
Sue Anderson, a spokeswoman, said: “There is a tendency to look at mortgage rates in a simplistic way. What that does is feed the idea that there is some magic correlation between the base rate and banks’ borrowing costs. There isn’t.”
However, according to the financial website Moneyfacts, the ten biggest lenders passed on the previous five base rate rises to their customers in full, and in some cases they increased their rates by more than the base rate.
Abbey raised its SVR by 0.34 per cent after the Bank of England increased the base rate by a quarter point to 5 per cent in November last year, while Alliance & Leicester raised its SVR by 0.3 percentage points after the quarter-point rise in January.
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Lenders seldom ask for proof of income for unsecured borrowings. I assume they take a punt in believing that most debt will be repaid with healthy profits to them. If this is true and the bubble bursts, they are to blame in the whole.
Afterall, if they did proper finacial assesments there would not be so much debt and this means less profit for the banks.
Us humans are pleasure seeking animals and spending hundreds of pounds of plastic money in an afternoon is pleasurable, almost human nature.
Then the statements arrive...
ewan, sherborne,
I think those Building Societies and Banks should be named and shamed for treating their customers like mugs. The same BSs and Banks were raising them when the BoE was, and were raising the full extent almost immediately after the MPC announcements. But now, they are doing nothing. The Obmbudsman should come down hard on them otherwise they will allow those Banks and BSs to make the MPC powerless in controlling anything about liquidity and will cause the economy to stagnate.
Mac, Manchester, UK
Cheap money was out there...
but no more...
Foreseeing what was happening with the economy i remortgaged at no cost on a BOE tracker at BOE + 0.17% (5.67%) for mortgage lifetime a couple of months ago, but the best I could get now would be BOE + 0.5% with the same lender - and that's with a 40% LTV.
The squeeze is happening even if your LTV and income multiples are healthy.
firstlight40, surrey, UK
Now the BoE base rate and Libor rate have parted company, the BoE base rate has little meaning to mortgage lenders. The only lenders who will pass on this BoE base rate cut are those with sufficient funds not to have to borrow from the money markets and those that have a vested interest in trying to prop up the ailing housing market.
Keith, Ashford,
Are you surprised? I doubt it. I am certainly not.
Look at the LIBOR rate for a more reliable indication of what rates the banks are prepared to lend money at. The base rate is the rate the BoE will lend to banks. As most of them have been hit hard but the credit crunch, I do not see mortgage rates coming down, as they want to recover the megalosses. Unfortunately the prudent savers will take the brunt of the interest rate cut.
Bon Plounder, Stevenage,
Hear, Hear, Ste B, London, UK. In the past, borrowers got into trouble when interest rates jumped from, say, 9% to 15%. Now a mere quarter point or two rise and we hear cries of panic. Anyone with any sense will, before taking out a mortgage, have considered how they would cope if rates were 4 or 5% higher - 25 years is a long time in economic terms and so such increases are far from unusual. Clearly, many recent borrowers haven't had much sense. Do they really expect sympathy for their foolishness?
Clint, Stafford, UK
Now the BoE base rate and Libor rate have parted company, the BoE base rate has little meaning to mortgage lenders. The only lenders who will pass on this BoE base rate cut are those with sufficient funds not to have to borrow from the money markets and those that have a vested interest in trying to prop up the ailing housing market.
Keith, Ashford,
It is a competitive marketplace not a Soviet style command economy.
Some banks may want to attract savers and price their products accordingly
James, NI, UK
The reluctance to cut rates will be a blow to homeowners already struggling with higher utility bills and mortgage payments after five interest rate rises since August 2006.
Well, if you borrow more than you can afford - it doesn't take a genius to work out what will happen. Too much talk of responsible lending and not enough of responsible borrowing.
Ste B, London, UK