Shopping & Style1 min ago
Money Blog: Big Banks Announce Interest Rate Hikes One After Other - And 'They're Not Small'
https:/
Yep, Labour are in power..
Answers
It's not pushing up interest rates on current and shortsavings at the moment, except perhaps for some longer term fixed savers. It's longer term rates that were falling but are now edging back up or at least not falling as quickly as they were, and it's therefore going to affect fixed rate mortgages such as those fixed for 5 years, and some cheap rate mortgage deals are being pulled.
Current rates are falling based on the fall in the base rate. The base rate may have fallen more quickly if the budget had been more neutral. But longer terms rates (2+ years on) which were falling are starting to edge back up, so the base rate reductions that were predicted for 2025 may not happen and base rate may edge back up in 2025/26. Your savings account rates should move back up slightly in a year or two too.
Long term mortgages are generally given using monie raised on the money market. Very few mortgages are using 'savers' cash these days.
Clearly the money Guys (and Gals) think long term interest rates will increase and so any money available to borrow will be at those rates. This is hardly surprisong given the anti business and anti growth budget we have just had.
It will get worse though once the min wage, the extra EHI and the GOAS's eplyment laws take hold next year. What little growth Sunak had achieved will be gone now.
Grim times ahead, I feel so sorry for those with Mortgages, rent and kids to pay for. Not so sorry for the feckless and public sector that seems to be all this Government cares about.
Thankfully no mortgage here. It looks like my daughter and her partner are stuck with their miniscule flat for a while longer.
I had a nice email from my bank this morning. They very kindly let me know that they'd looked at what other banks were doing, and they're following suite and changing (lowering) interest on my savings. Jolly good!
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.