LMS: “record flight” to five-year fixes

Published on

LMS has reported that homeowners are moving away from short-term deals and variable rates and onto five-year fixes at low rates in moves to guarantee certainty and financial security.

According to the conveyancing service provider, fewer homeowners remortgaged to lower their monthly repayments in July – just 15% compared to 21% in June. And only 15% of homeowners remortgaged to increase the size of their overall loan in July – a fall from 19% in June.

Instead of remortgaging to lower monthly repayments or borrow extra money, homeowners appear to be nervous about interest rates heading north and remortgaged onto long-term deals at attractively low rates for certainty and financial security, LMS said.

Just 2% of remortgagors predict interest rates to fall in the next year, with the remaining 98% expecting rates to either stay the same or rise. 37% fixed onto a five-year deal in July – the greatest since numbers were first tracked – and a massive increase from 7% who previously had a fixed five-year product.

The average mortgage rate in July was 2.07% – significantly lower than the average rate of 2.41% in July 2016.

Andy Knee, chief executive of LMS, said: “We are seeing a significant change in consumer behaviour when remortgaging. Typically, over the last year, people were remortgaging to save on their monthly repayments or borrow additional funds. Instead, with rates low and expectations of a rate rise high, people are fixing for longer for added financial security.

“Borrowers are taking shelter from future rate rises and preparing for potentially turbulent times to come. The way people borrow is changing, there is a significant decline in interest-only and variable rate deals, and fixing for longer appears to be the top priority. It’s a flight to financial security.”

The number of people remortgaging their home in July increased by 12% from 34,300 in June to 38,348. In addition, the value of remortgage transactions increased by 3% between June and July – from £6.0 billion to £6.2 billion.

The increase in remortgaging activity was driven by improved affordability in the previous month. The average annual repayment fell from £8,197 in May to £8,080 in June. Meanwhile, the percentage of total income that the average annual mortgage repayment accounted for dropped to its lowest level this year, from 17.5% in May to 17.1% in June.

Knee added: “Remortgagors benefitted from a bumper month in July as affordability improved to a yearlong high. This propelled overall activity. With interest rates still low and lenders competing with one another to offer customers the best possible deal – there has never been a better time to remortgage in 2017.”

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

Latest articles

Market Harborough broadens tier two mortgage criteria to boost complex case lending

Market Harborough Building Society has introduced a series of criteria enhancements to its tier...

Coventry for intermediaries reduces rates across residential and buy-to-let ranges

Coventry for intermediaries has announced rate cuts of up to 19 basis points, with...

Halifax cuts remortgage rates across selected two and five-year fixed deals

Halifax Intermediaries has announced a series of rate cuts across its remortgage product range,...

The Leeds reports £104m profit amid robust lending and savings growth

Leeds Building Society has reported a profit before tax of £104.4 million for the...

Annual house price growth picks up as affordability improves

The UK housing market showed renewed resilience in July, with house prices rising by...

Latest publication

Latest opinions

Job cuts to inflation shock: preparing for a mortgage arrears crisis

The latest data on jobs paints a picture of a rapidly weakening labour market. The...

URGENT! AI Is coming for you. Or maybe not…

I’ll try to make this as straight to the point as I can. The...

Mind the gap: Can mortgage advice change the game for protection?

Many industry insiders still talk about the UK protection gap and how vast it...

Navigating HMO and MUFB complexity with confidence

Historically, larger Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) and Multi-Unit Freehold Blocks (MUFBs) have often...

Other news

Market Harborough broadens tier two mortgage criteria to boost complex case lending

Market Harborough Building Society has introduced a series of criteria enhancements to its tier...

Coventry for intermediaries reduces rates across residential and buy-to-let ranges

Coventry for intermediaries has announced rate cuts of up to 19 basis points, with...

Halifax cuts remortgage rates across selected two and five-year fixed deals

Halifax Intermediaries has announced a series of rate cuts across its remortgage product range,...