Until this drop interest rates were 4.5% but my mortagage lender charges me 6.8%. I thought the two tallied but obviously not. I'd never even noticed this until the credit crunch started.
Depends what your mortgage is, most mortgage lenders have a Standard Variable Rate, which is set by them and does not equate to the same as base rate. Some tracker mortgages will be a %age above base, and clearly these would always track base - hence the clever name!Until this drop interest rates were 4.5% but my mortagage lender charges me 6.8%. I thought the two tallied but obviously not. I'd never even noticed this until the credit crunch started.
great news![]()
thats good news
sadly for us we would like intrest rates higher,as we have no mortgage and with this drop there is less return on our savings.there are always 2 sides to everthing.
Paulh
I fell really lucky at the end of my last mortgage's discount period and my financial adviser put me into a tracker while I waited for a good deal. That was just before the words 'credit crunch' started to hit the papers and fortunately i've had every cut passed straight on. This should save me about £120 a month, which makes up for the bad exchange rate.
personly i would keep my payments the same,use the £120 to pay off the capital,then you would see that £100,00 mortgage come down
Paulh
Not for savers, it's not![]()
I disagree. This rate drop was needed to put some liquidity back in the system, especially in the face of falling house prices. Thousands of people are now going into negative equity, the government needs to step up and sort the mess out - lowering the interest rate is one way to do this. TBH, saving has not been particularly high on the agenda for most people in recent years - not only due to increasing costs, but also because it has largely been pointless given inflation levels. After you've accounted for the interest earned to counteract inflation, not much is left.I agree, Nat. With one income, we're not able to save as much as we used to.
I think that low interest rates have an unfortunate affect on groups like pensioners who now probably don't have a mortgage and have saved a bit for their retirement and not only has their pension fund dropped because of the FTSE but their regular savings are dropping and so is their income and they suffer the most with the high heating costs. I think Mr Brown and Co needs to think about the implications of lowering the rates so much yesterday.
Afterall if we didn't have savers the banks wouldn't have had all that dosh to lend in the last few crazy years!