Home loan rates show ‘signs of modest decline’: Bloomberg Intelligence  

By: ameer@trustedteam.com

Early signs of “a very modest decline in UK mortgage rates could offer some respite to the domestic housing market,” says the Bloomberg Intelligence unit.   

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The research group points out that market expectations of peak base rate hikes from the Bank of England have declined 70 basis points – to 5.7% from 6.4% last month — “amid tentative signs of slowing inflation”.  

However, the unit adds that house prices and transactions may keep softening as long as mortgage rates remain above 5%.  

The BoE lifted the base rate by 25bps to 5.25% last week, its 14th consecutive rise and the highest level for 15 years.  

The central bank is battling inflation, which dropped to 7.9% in the year to June from 8.7%, but still remain almost four times higher than its 2% target.  

Bloomberg Intelligence real estate analyst Iwona Hovenko says: “Tentative signs of easing cost pressures, with inflation slowing more than anticipated and the labour market also softening – as unemployment unexpectedly increased in June [by 0.1% to 3.8%] – could support some pull-back in rate views, in turn driving mortgage rates lower.   

“This may, however, require several months of consistently slowing inflation and wage pressure. Despite recent news of mortgage-rate cuts by lenders, financing costs remain high and still pose a significant risk to housing activity and prices.”  

Hovenko adds: “Though BoE data for June doesn’t yet reflect the latest steep increases, anecdotally, price-comparison websites show the lowest five-year fixed rates on a 75% loan-to-value mortgage soared to 5.44% in early August from about 3.9% three months earlier, with some of the biggest spikes coming in days.   

“Comparable lowest two-year fixes surged to about 6% from a little more than 4% at the beginning of May.”  

Hovenko points out: “Though surging rates may add urgency for buyers who have already secured a more-attractive mortgage offer, other house hunters may delay purchases until rates fall and housing-market headwinds ease.   

“Such a rapid jump in rates may have particularly hit homebuyers heavily reliant on debt.”  

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