Many mortgage advisers are failing to do their job properly,according to an undercover investigation by Which? Money researchers, with only four out of 50 advisers found to be giving acceptable advice.
80 per cent of them failed to provide one or more pieces of key information and 35 failed to do proper checks on the applicant’s ability to repay the mortgage.
Two out of three of advisers tried to sell the mortgage applicant insurance at the same time, often for an unsuitable product, and many failed to tailor their advice to the individual’s needs.
Which? Money editor, Martyn Hocking, said: “With mortgage costs soaring and the spectre of negative equity returning to the property market, it’s important that people get help to find the right deal.
There are still more than 3,000 mortgage deals out there, and the difference in cost can be thousands of pounds a year, so it’s vital people do their homework and chose the right adviser with care.”
The good news is that Nationwide is to cut the cost of mortgages for new borrowers from tomorrow, with rates falling by up to 0.46 per cent on some of its fixed rate and tracker home loans.
Mortgage rates have fluctuated during the credit crunch due to the cost of wholesale borrowing for lenders. Swap rates, the rates at which banks lend to each other and which influence mortgage rates, have been stubbornly high until recent weeks, when they started to fall.
Nationwide is cutting the rates on its two year fixed rate deal (75 per cent loan to value with a £599 fee), from 6.48 per cent to 6.18 per cent. For 90 per cent LTV mortgages, the rate drops from 6.88 per cent to 6.58 per cent.
On its Lifetime Tracker mortgage, Nationwide has reduced its rates to 5.98 per cent (on up to 75 per cent LTV) and 6.38 per cent (for 75-90 per cent LTV).
Ray Boulger of mortgage broker, John Charcol, commented: “Swap rates peaked in mid-June at 6.5 per cent, but are now 5.82 per cent. Nationwide has also aligned its purchase and remortgage rates making it possible for existing customers to enjoy the same deals as new customers.”
Nationwide attracted a great deal of criticism a few years ago for limiting its best deals to new customers only.
But the mortgage market is expected to remain difficult and volatile in the coming months as the credit crunch continues to take its toll and the outlook for interest rates remains unclear.
Take a look at Defaqto’s uniuqe mortgage calculator to see how much you can afford to borrow:






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