If so, this deal from Yorkshire building society is worth checking out. It’s been launched at a time of increased speculation that interest rates could start to rise by the end of the year.
Yorkshire building society is offering a five-year fix at 1.55%. The deal is available up to 65% loan-to-value (LTV) – i.e. if you have a 35% deposit.
According to Moneyfacts, Yorkshire’s 1.55% five-year fix at 65% LTV is currently the lowest five-year fix on the market for house purchase customers, and the joint current lowest remortgage five-year fix with Monmouthshire Building Society.
However, you need to factor in an arrangement fee of £1,495.
To work out of this is the best deal for you, you need to add up the monthly payments over five years (i.e. 60 x your monthly payment) plus the £1,495 fee. Then compare it to other deals using the same calculation.
As a general rule, the bigger your mortgage the more important the rate and the less important the fee, and vice versa.
All comments (29)
PepsiCommentator111
28 Sep 17#1
60x your monthly payment plus £1495, no?
writergirl74 to PepsiCommentator111
29 Sep 17#27
Yep, you're correct! Sorry about that, I have changed it now. Thanks for pointing it out.
mariolj
28 Sep 17#2
If this is true interest rate will go up in the near future, why banks release such a good deals now when they could make more money. only asking.
gonzo02 to mariolj
28 Sep 17#3
Highly competitive market. So until rates do rise they are fighting for your custom.
zabada to mariolj
28 Sep 17#6
When I took out a mortgage - and then a couple of times when remortgaging - I have gone for a fixed rate, as interest rates were always "about to go up". That was 7 and a half years ago...
iamprobably to zabada
28 Sep 17#7
Absolutely... they arent going anywhere until after brexit withdraw - and even then ... it may take several years.
YIMan
28 Sep 17#4
They won’t make more money when the interest rate rises. Arguably they’ll make less because higher interest rates means less people can afford mortgages or the same people can afford less so the banks won’t do as much business.
marathonic to YIMan
28 Sep 17#5
The bank take in the same interest on borrowings of £300,000 at 3% as they do on £200,000 at 4.5% so your argument doesnt stand up.
YIMan to marathonic
28 Sep 17#9
Which bit doesn't stand up?
marathonic to YIMan
28 Sep 17#15
The entire statement "They won’t make more money when the interest rate rises. Arguably they’ll make less"
Banks have been in tough times recently but, back when rates were much higher, they were making huge profits and stocks like Lloyds and Barclays were paying huge dividends.
YIMan to marathonic
28 Sep 17#17
My post was a response to the earlier post stating the belief that banks would make more money if the interest rates went up...i.e. inferring that the bank sees all the benefit of the interest rate rise. This is incorrect. The bank generally makes BOE interest rate plus whatever margin it can make. So theoretically it doesn't matter if the interest rate is 2% or 5% if the bank makes say BOE base rate plus 1%e
HOWEVER....if the BOE base rate rises to 5%, mortgages will become less affordable than they are at BOE 2%.....therefore the bank is likely to sell fewer mortgages therefore make less multiples of its 1% margin.
This may be slightly offset by the assumption that if interest rates rise, house prices may have to fall otherwise thereby potentially to some extent offsetting reduced mortgage affordability.
BUT...don't forget that if interest rates rise, the cost of un-fixed loan/credit card debt will also rise, further impacting affordability.
ro53ben to marathonic
28 Sep 17#12
That's because you don't understand banking. YIMan is correct.
That's just a quick google search result - I could post many more examples.
On Bloomberg TV this morning, there was an economist discussing how shorting the 10-year German bund market (betting on rate rises) costs 0.3% per year so shorting means that you'd need them to rise to 0.8% over the next year to break even. He advised buying financials instead as financials will gain with the rate rises and, instead of costing you 0.3% per year, you'd be getting paid a dividend to wait for the inevitable rate rises.
ro53ben to marathonic
28 Sep 17#16
Quoting a load of irrelevant links still doesn't mean you understand how banks work. In the context of mortgage lending, which this thread is about, you are wrong.
ses6jwg
28 Sep 17#8
Nobody can predict what interest rates will do so don't listen to other people.
I did and fixed my mortgage with a low ltv at 2.99% with a £495 fee back in 2014. The same product now with the same bank is 1.99% with no fee. The press were telling everyone to fix and then the Base rate went down
The bank of England have said they expect small rate rises to happen over the next 2 years.
Choose a monthly payment you can afford and a product that best suits your needs and live your life. Remember to review again a few months before your fix ends.
Generally it's not worth paying a fee unless you've got a big mortgage.
nige182 to ses6jwg
28 Sep 17#10
Exactly this, the fee isn't stated in the title or I wouldn't have even bothered to click in, the fee on this knocks out any savings over 5 years over my current tracker. I think we should state any arrangement fee in the title on here, since it directly affects how good the 'deal' is. In my mind, it would be like someone listing a contract mobile and only listing the £5 per month contract and not stating the £500 deposit required to get that.
androidavis
28 Sep 17#11
Err, nice deal but then read through the original post it says you need to find £1495 up front to get this 5 year deal. This is as important as the rate on balance, are you willing to amend the title?
bigbak
28 Sep 17#13
Be aware when you redeem that they can con you by charging interest for the following month. You need to make sure you exchange on the final day.
Truely awful customer service as well.
madbull
28 Sep 17#18
For me HSBC 5 year fix @ 1.59% with £750 fee is so best, although that is for 60% ltv
IndyS
28 Sep 17#19
Hopefully this is an indication of rates staying static/reducing and more competitive deals on the horizon.
Opening post
If so, this deal from Yorkshire building society is worth checking out. It’s been launched at a time of increased speculation that interest rates could start to rise by the end of the year.
Yorkshire building society is offering a five-year fix at 1.55%. The deal is available up to 65% loan-to-value (LTV) – i.e. if you have a 35% deposit.
According to Moneyfacts, Yorkshire’s 1.55% five-year fix at 65% LTV is currently the lowest five-year fix on the market for house purchase customers, and the joint current lowest remortgage five-year fix with Monmouthshire Building Society.
However, you need to factor in an arrangement fee of £1,495.
To work out of this is the best deal for you, you need to add up the monthly payments over five years (i.e. 60 x your monthly payment) plus the £1,495 fee. Then compare it to other deals using the same calculation.
As a general rule, the bigger your mortgage the more important the rate and the less important the fee, and vice versa.
All comments (29)
Banks have been in tough times recently but, back when rates were much higher, they were making huge profits and stocks like Lloyds and Barclays were paying huge dividends.
HOWEVER....if the BOE base rate rises to 5%, mortgages will become less affordable than they are at BOE 2%.....therefore the bank is likely to sell fewer mortgages therefore make less multiples of its 1% margin.
This may be slightly offset by the assumption that if interest rates rise, house prices may have to fall otherwise thereby potentially to some extent offsetting reduced mortgage affordability.
BUT...don't forget that if interest rates rise, the cost of un-fixed loan/credit card debt will also rise, further impacting affordability.
As others have said, the fees ruin this deal.
Financial Shares Climb as Investors Bet on U.S. Rate Rise
Barclays shares post biggest gain after Bank of England's chief economist sparks speculation that rate rise may be imminent
That's just a quick google search result - I could post many more examples.
On Bloomberg TV this morning, there was an economist discussing how shorting the 10-year German bund market (betting on rate rises) costs 0.3% per year so shorting means that you'd need them to rise to 0.8% over the next year to break even. He advised buying financials instead as financials will gain with the rate rises and, instead of costing you 0.3% per year, you'd be getting paid a dividend to wait for the inevitable rate rises.
I did and fixed my mortgage with a low ltv at 2.99% with a £495 fee back in 2014. The same product now with the same bank is 1.99% with no fee. The press were telling everyone to fix and then the Base rate went down
The bank of England have said they expect small rate rises to happen over the next 2 years.
Choose a monthly payment you can afford and a product that best suits your needs and live your life. Remember to review again a few months before your fix ends.
Generally it's not worth paying a fee unless you've got a big mortgage.
You need to make sure you exchange on the final day.
Truely awful customer service as well.