Weather Morning: 9°c Sunny spells Afternoon: 10°c Sunny spells

News

For sale signs
Disadvantaged: First-time buyers are not receiving the benefits of house price falls

Mortgage rates "not helping first-time buyers"

17 Nov 2008


First-time buyers are not receiving the full benefit from house price falls because of hikes in mortgage rates for people with small deposits, figures showed today.

The best mortgage deal available for someone with only a 10% deposit has increased by more than 1% during the past year, despite the Bank of England base rate nearly halving from 5.75% to 3% during the same period.

The lowest rate currently available for people with a 10% deposit is a 6.24% variable rate deal from Yorkshire Bank, according to financial information group Moneyfacts.co.uk.

This is more than double the current Bank of England base rate of 3% and well up on the best mortgage available for a borrower with a 40% deposit of 3.99%, offered as a variable rate loan by HSBC and a one-year fixed rate deal by the Woolwich.

The best rate for people who want a fixed rate mortgage on a 90% loan to value ratio is 6.54% for a two-year deal from Britannia Building Society.

These rates for people with small deposits are well up on a market leading fixed rate loan of 5.35% offered by Stroud & Swindon Building Society 12 months ago to people looking to borrow 95% of their home's value, despite the Bank of England base rate being at 5.75% at the time.

First-time buyers taking out a typical £120,000 mortgage on this deal would have had repayments of £735 a month.

House prices have fallen by 15% during the past year, according to the Halifax measure, meaning that first-time buyers would now have to pay only £102,000 to purchase a comparable property.

This would have reduced their mortgage repayments by more than £110 a month if the 5.35% deal was still available.

But much of the savings made through house price falls have been wiped out by the higher mortgage rates borrowers now face.

A £102,000 mortgage at today's best buy rate of 6.24% for someone with a 10% deposit would cost £680 a month, only £55 less than borrowers would have paid on a leading rate when house prices were higher.

The difference is further reduced if people wanted to opt for a fixed rate deal, with a best buy rate of 6.54% costing £699 a month.

Both of these deals are also only available to people with a 10% deposit, while last year's best buy of 5.35% was available to people with a deposit of only 5%.

As a result first-time buyers would have to save at least £10,200, nearly double the £5,000 they would previously have had to put down.

Excluding deals that are aimed specifically at first-time buyers, there are now only two deals for people with just a 10% deposit featured in the Moneyfacts best buy tables.

This is in stark contrast to this time last year, when all but four mortgages in the tables were for people borrowing 90% or more of their home's value, with the majority of loans aimed at people borrowing 95%.

There has been a steep reduction in the number of different deals available for people with only a 10% deposit with just 250 loans now available, compared with more than one thousand before the start of the credit crunch.

But 28% of these deals are also limited to people living in certain regions of the country, and once these are stripped out, there are only 180 loans available.

Unsurprisingly, figures from the CML showed that the average size of deposit put down by first-time buyers has increased during the past 12 months, rising from 10% a year ago to 16% now, as people try to qualify for better rates.

Reader views (2)

 Add your view

Can anyone tell me if they have heard of anything being done about this? I have just lots the house of my dreams because the rates are extortionate!!

- Carolyn Boag, Farnham, England, 14/01/2009 21:14
Report abuse

And the reason we are in this mess, is people being lent money that they can't really afford. So you have to save a bit more, that is no bad thing!

Question is - how come we have forgotten that it is not that long ago when interest was in double figures.

Simple fact - just because we want something now - doesn't mean we get it!

- Jc, se1, 17/11/2008 22:33
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • David Cameron launches new crackdown on binge drinking Supermarket alcohol display David Cameron will today vow to take on the "scandal" of public drunkenness and alcohol abuse that costs the NHS £2.7 billion a year
  • Payout of £600,000 for witness put at risk by Met and CPS Scotland Yard A teenage court witness was given a £600,000 payout by the Crown Prosecution Service and Metropolitan Police after he was put at risk, it...
  • MPs to visit Falklands for military inspection HMS Dauntless MPs are to visit the Falklands amid heightened tension between Britain and Argentina
  • Make 'death trap' junctions safer for cyclists, demands university mourning three Ellie Carey A university that saw two students and a member of staff killed cycling in London last year has accused Boris Johnson of failing to act...
  • What a smoothie! Eight-year-old Valentine gives Kate roses and a heart-shaped cupcake Kate Smoothie The Duchess of Cambridge's first Valentine's Day as a married woman was marked with roses, a card and a cupcake - but not from Prince...
  • Unemployment rate hits 16-year high Job Centre unemployment The UK's unemployment rate increased to a 16-year high today after another rise in the jobless total. The figure jumped by 48,000 in the...
  • Bank to reveal inflation forecast Mervyn King The Bank of England is to give a clearer insight into how deep it expects the current downturn in the economy to sink
  • RAF airman shot in Afghanistan was 'shining star' Tomlin An RAF airman who died after being shot while on patrol in Afghanistan was a "true hero and shining star", his family said
  • Osborne defends his cuts strategy as inflation falls George Osborne Chancellor George Osborne defended his economic strategy as a fall in inflation finally brought mild relief to some from the tight squeeze...
  • We're the Cockney rhyming gang: Tower Hamlets pupils learn to write and peform poems Bonner Primary School Hundreds of schoolchildren who had never been inside a theatre have been coached to write and perform their own poetry on stage
  •  

    Don't Miss