Borrowers suffer triple whammy with tracker mortgages, says Defaqto

In the days before the credit crunch, people took out mortgages that tracked the Bank Base Rate because they thought the rate would drop in the future. The loading above BBR was generally stable in the region of 0.5% to 0.75%, depending on the length of the tracker term.In today’s increasingly difficult conditions, all this has changed. Not only has the number of available BBR tracker mortgages dropped by almost a quarter since July 2007, the higher loadings on the BBR have, on average, has more than negated the half percent decrease in BBR since then.

For two year trackers, the period with the most plans on offer, the average loading above BBR increased from 0.49% to 1.17% over the eight months since July 2007, an increase of 139%,  while the BBR rate fell from 5.75% to 5.25% over the same period.

It’s a similar picture for three year trackers with an average loading increase from 0.52% to 1.14%, an increase of nearly 120%. For the other main mortgage term products, there have been increases, even if they have not been quite as swingeing.

For the consumer the pain doesn’t stop there. Not only has the number of mortgages on offer decreased while loading percentages have increased, but application fees have seen huge uplifts since July. Fees for a typical 2 year mortgage have gone up from £688 in July 2007 to £1,005 currently, a 46% increase. This gets worse at the tracker term increases, rising to a massive 139% for term trackers.

David Black, Principal Consultant - Banking at Defaqto said: “With banks and building societies trying to repair their balance sheets in an atmosphere of financial mayhem, it is hardly surprising it is the poor consumer who is caught in the middle and is having to pay more for less choice. It is almost as though we are going back to the days when lenders felt they are doing you a favour by offering you a mortgage.”

-Ends-

Bank Base Rate

Tracker Mortgages

July 07

April 08

% Increase/  Decrease

1 year

 

 

Number

7

3

-57.1

Average % Loading

0.48%

1.19%

147.9

Average Fee

£505

£486

-3.8

 

 

 

2 year

 

 

 

Number

265

159

-40.0

Average % Loading

0.49%

1.17%

138.7

Average Fee

£688

£1,005

46.1

 

 

 

3 year

 

 

 

Number

75

74

-1.3

Average % Loading

0.52%

1.14%

119.2

Average Fee

£606

£1,016

67.7

 

 

 

5 year

 

 

 

Number

29

17

-41.4

Average % Loading

0.72%

1.04%

45.0

Average Fee

£444

£789

77.7

 

 

 

Term

 

 

 

Number

215

199

-7.4%

Average % Loading

0.75%

1.15%

53.3

Average Fee

£442

£1,060

139.8

 

 

 

All

 

 

 

Number

591

452

-23.5

Average % Loading

0.6%

1.16%

93.3

Average Fee

£573

£1,013

76.8

For further information contact:

Defaqto Limited 

David Black,Chris Johnston or Luci Mylward

01844 295 454

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Providers may widen margins at customers’ expense - Defaqto’s David Black comments on base rate change

Following The Monetary Policy Committee’s decision to reduce the Bank of England Base rate by 0.25% to 5.25%, Defaqto’s Principal Consultant - Banking, David Black comments:”This 0.25% cut by the Monetary Policy Committee was widely anticipated and comes as no surprise. I will watch with interest to see whether the full cut is passed on to both savers and borrowers but I suspect that some providers may use the opportunity to widen their margins at customers’ expense.

“Prior to this cut the average Standard Variable Rate is currently 7.55%. Last time the bank base rate was at 5.25% (between 11th January and 9th May 2007) the average Standard Variable Rate was 7.05%.”

Ends

For further information contact:

Defaqto Limited 

David Black, Chris Johnston or Luci Mylward

01844 295 454

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