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Hundreds of thousands of Northern Rock borrowers are facing huge rises in their monthly mortgage repayments because they are trapped in deals with the beleaguered lender.
In line with the business plan adopted when Ron Sandler was appointed chairman almost four months ago, the bank has scrapped attractive rates and tightened lending conditions to deter new customers and encourage existing ones to remortgage elsewhere.
However, not all customers have the option of leaving the nationalised lender. About 200,000 customers took out Rock's Together mortgage, which enabled homeowners to borrow up to 125 per cent of their property's value. As the credit crunch has worsened, lenders have pulled their most generous deals, leaving cash-strapped borrowers with nowhere to turn. Few lenders now offer deals above 95 per cent of a property's value and those that do are extremely uncompetitive.
This leaves thousands of Together customers with little option but to move on to the bank's standard rate of 7.49 per cent at the end of their fixed-rate deals. A homeowner who took out a £150,000 fixed-rate loan with Northern Rock at 6 per cent will see their monthly repayments rise by £186 on the bank's standard rate. Melanie Bien, of Savills Private Finance, a broker, said: “Unfortunately, people with 100 and 125 per cent loans who are coming to the end of the fixed-rate don't have much choice.”
At the beginning of June, Northern Rock announced a deal with Lloyds TSB to help its customers to remortgage. However, Lloyds TSB accepts applications only from Northern Rock customers with at least 20 per cent equity in their homes, and was accused of cherry-picking the lowest-risk customers. Even the Northern Rock customers who are able to remortgage face a much harsher market than the one they entered into two years ago. Mortgage rates have soared and the best rates are reserved for customers with the biggest deposits. The average two-year fix is at an 11-year high of 7.05 per cent, according to Moneyfacts.co.uk, the price comparison website. The best deal is from Skipton Building Society, at 5.79 per cent, but this is available only on loans of up to 90 per cent of a home's value.
The high cost of vanishing mortgage deals
SANDRA GEORGE, from Barry, Glamorgan, took out a two-year fixed-rate Together mortgage for 100 per cent of her property's value in October 2006. She has made interest-only repayments of £715 a month on the £135,000 loan from Northern Rock.
Ms George, a finance manager, is due to remortgage and contacted a broker after becoming worried about interest rate rises.
L&C Mortgages said she had no option but to repay 10 per cent of her loan and apply for a new deal at 90 per cent, the highest loan to home value ratio now available.
“The adviser said we didn't have much choice because there were no more 100 per cent deals around,” she said. I've had to scrimp and save to find £10,000 to make up the shortfall in the new deal. I would have had to save even more, but fortunately the house has slightly risen in value.”
Her new mortgage, with Abbey, costs £840 a month - £125 more than her previous deal. The rate is fixed at 6.05 per cent for five years.
Ms George, who lives with her partner, Spencer Robins, 30, thinks Northern Rock's attitude to existing borrowers has been irresponsible. “Borrowers haven't been given any options. There are going to be loads of repossessions because there are borrowers in far worse a situation than me.”
She believes that Northern Rock is not doing enough to help borrowers with high loan-to-value deals. “The pact with Lloyds TSB isn't going to help anyone because Lloyds TSB will only take people with 20 per cent deposits, and the people who need help the most are those borrowers who owe more than the value of their homes.”
GARY WYLIE, 26, and his wife, Rachel, 25, are keen to move to a bigger home, but Northern Rock will not extend their 100 per cent deal to another property.
The couple, who have one child, live in a two-bedroom flat in Glasgow. They have a 100 per cent Together mortgage from Northern Rock, in a five-year fixed-rate deal with an interest rate of 5.99 per cent.
When they took out the £128,000 loan in September 2006 the bank assured them that it could be transferred at any point during the five-year term. However, Northern Rock says that it will now allow only 90 per cent of their new home’s value to be covered by their mortgage.
Mr Wylie, a services manager, said that though the couple were told the loan was “totally portable”, they were being offered “a different product to the one we took out”. They would have to save an extra £30,000 to move.
CHRISTOPHER HAWKE, 28, faces a £130 rise in his repayments when he is forced on to Northern Rock’s 7.49 per cent standard variable rate (SVR) while he waits for his application to remortgage with another lender to be approved.
Northern Rock told him seven weeks ago that he would have to remortgage elsewhere or face moving on to its standard rate. “Borrowers were not given enough warning about the potential consequences of the nationalisation. Northern Rock has really let its mortgage customers down,” he said.
Mr Hawke, a housing support officer from Ashton-under-Lyne, had a three-year fixed-rate deal with Northern Rock at 5.79 per cent. The loan of £88,000 represented 90 per cent of his property’s value and his repayments stood at £553 a month.
For the next two months he will be paying £681 a month on Northern Rock’s SVR.
Mr Hawke has found a 90 per cent deal with HSBC, a lifetime tracker 0.79 per cent above the base rate. His new monthly repayments will be £563, an extra £120 a year, but increases in the base rate predicted later in the year will squeeze his finances.
“The increases in repayments have pushed me right to the edge of what I can afford,” he said.
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Forget the why poeple have taken this mortgage product and focus on where we are at and how we move on. The problem is here so we need to deal with it.
NR are not behaving ethically and are making some questionable decisions - moving good customers and leaving the risky. Now that's stupid!
Terry, Bromley, UK
Some people just dont get it. I sympathise with no one. Quick enough to buy this and buy that, and "oh I want this" and "Oh I want that" and now that they cant pay they come crying to hard working Tax payers to bail them out. NORTHERN ROCK IS NOT A CHARITY.
Michael, Wimbledon, London
Richard, I agree that it is a business but I believe they are shooting themselves in the foot. I believe that they will have so many reposessions because people cannot move due to LTV and they will not be able to afford repayments due to SVR. We are pretty much sorted but my concern is NR long term
Sandra, Barry, UK
Sandra, Northern Rock has to act like any other bank would. It cannot take it easy on people because it has been nationalised, the EU do not allow it and are monitoring what is happening
I also feel sorry for a lot of people, they got sucked in. Totally Brown's fault
Richard, Suffolk,
Ian, Hindsight is a wonderful thing and I am totally responsible for the position I am in. I was 22 at the time and we had to move, NR's option was there which we took. Being a tax payer I am concerned about NR's responsibility and just think they should give options to certain people (not me)
Sandra, Barry, UK
Gordon, it was not greed that made us take a 100% mortgage, just necessity. Sorry for all the comments just feel feel a need to defend myself. I wish I had more than 300 words to explain myself, and please do not be too harsh on others until you know the situation, it is upsetting
Sandra, Barry, UK
I'm afraid I can't sympathise with someone who wants (not needs) a bigger property and are shocked when they are asked to pay towards it.
If someone cannot not raise a 5% deposit for a £130,000 home why are they even considering a larger mortgage? Sometimes you just can't have everything you want!
Paul, Newcastle, UK
NR are being irresposible. People will not be able to afford SVR and will not be able to move because of LTV, hence reposessions. They are also not allowing people to move earlier without redemption penalties. We had 10k aside for moving, which covered SDLT, legal etc and yes we did have to move
Sandra, Barry, UK
Sorry, also do not believe that prices always go up, utter rubbish. I love my home and do not regret a second of it. I will have my mortgage paid by the time I am 40 and affordability wise we are fine, just the LTV being problem. You are very quick to judge and assume, please don't, no need.....
Sandra, Barry, UK
"Ms George . . . .thinks Northern Rock's attitude to existing borrowers has been irresponsible."
And taking out an interest only mortgage for two years at 100% of the property's value was responsible was it?
Oh I forgot;
Properties only ever go up in value, You "had" to get on the ladder etc etc
Ian, Bedford, UK
The credit crunch was a self fulfilling prophecy. The banks were aware of the credit crunch situation before it became public knowledge. Effectively, the greed of the banks has caused this, and yet in the UK, our own government is bailing out those institutions, and the public pick up the cost.
Adam, Bristol, UK
A 100% interest-only mortgage is nothing more than a greedy high risk bet with someone else's money and whose success is 100 % dependent on just one outcome viz perpetually rising house prices. And we have a "Finance Manager" complaining about NR's irresponsible attitude?
Gordon Alexander, Frome, UK
Poor judgement: 'affordable now and forever'
They could not be told otherwise and now it is perilously close to completley bankrupting the many. Propertry or rather mortgage debt is beginning to rot and the smell of it is stronger and more sickening.
Do not hold your nose or breath.
Goldfinger, Gloucester, UK
I'm sorry but 'I have 100% INTEREST ONLY mortgage' what were these people thinking??
Sally, bristol,
Wasn't this what happened in the States resulting in their credit crunch? I'd say the UK's own crunch has already started and I blame largely the artificially low interest rates, particularly post 9/11 for this very avoidable mess the UK economy's in today...
cww, Ipswich, Suffolk, UK,
Northern rocked!
Geoff Ruud-St-John, Torquay,
Stephen, the obvious thing to do with the repossessed properties is to replenish the social housing stock, which is what many were to begin with. It was council and housing association tenants that the Northern Rock sub-prime loan sharks targeted.
Paul, Coventry,
The tax payer is going to have to foot the bill for thousands of repossesions as the houses will be sold at auction for a fraction of their true value.Why noy allow the borrower to rent their house?
stephen hulton, eure, france
Ah, that four letter word! "Told". Promises, promises. "Promise me the world - but put it in writing, sign it and date it".
Tony Morris, Bendigo , Australia