Back Menu

Property News

Millions are facing soaring mortgage rates. How did we leave them so vulnerable? | Will Hutton


Homeowners in Britain are especially at risk because of a shortage of long-term loans. The sooner the Bank of England acts to fix this the betterThere is a cross-party consensus that Britain as a property-owning democracy should promote home ownership. To that end, 7.5 million people hold a record £1.7tn of mortgage debt. Yet that debt is more exposed to short-term movements in interest rates than in any other advanced country – placing millions of households in danger of extreme privation when, as now, interest rates suddenly rise. It is a lack of duty of care bordering on criminal neglect.By next December, cumulatively 4.4 million households will have been forced to refix their mortgages at steeply higher rates since Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine last February and interest rates started climbing. Then, two-year fixed-rate mortgages were available at under 3%: today they cost close to 6%. The Resolution Foundation thinktank, assuming that the two-year fix will remain above 6% until next year, estimates that mortgage holders’ annual payments will jump by £15.8bn as their two-year fixes come to an end. Given that so few households have more than £2,000 of savings, the Institute for Fiscal Studies forecasts 2.9 million mortgage holders exhausting their savings completely. Continue reading…

Source : theguardian.com
Read more…Millions are facing soaring mortgage rates. How did we leave them so vulnerable? | Will Hutton

Unpicking the past: an ancient silk farm gets a smooth new look
Warmer soils and longer days give the plants the push they need
Thailand Property News