UK homeowners face huge rise in payments when
fixed-rate mortgages expire
More than 2.4m deals are ending in 2024, raising fears
of financial timebomb
Richard
Partington Economics correspondent
@RJPartington
Sat 17 Jun
2023 06.00 BST
More than a
quarter of UK homeowners on a fixed-rate mortgage are heading for sharp
increase in monthly payments before the next election, in a financial timebomb
that will rock the Conservatives just as voters prepare to choose the next
government.
With the
Bank of England expected to increase its key interest rate next week for the
13th time, figures shared with the Guardian by UK Finance, the banking industry
trade body, show more than 2.4m fixed-rate homeowner deals will expire between
now and the end of 2024.
The
prospect of millions of households facing a dramatic rise in borrowing costs
comes after a week of renewed turbulence in financial markets as City traders
bet the Bank rate would reach close to 6% before Christmas.
In
convulsions last seen during the chaos of the ill-fated Liz Truss premiership,
Britain’s biggest lenders, including Nationwide, NatWest and HSBC, have
scrambled to pull hundreds of cheaper deals in recent days, and raised the cost
of new home loans to the highest level since the 2008 financial crisis.
“The moron
premium is back,” said David Blanchflower, a former member of the Bank’s rate-setting
monetary policy committee. “It seems to me the government and the Bank are in
very deep trouble. The reason is because inflation is higher in the UK, and the
markets don’t believe they are getting it down. They’re completely and utterly
lost.”
“Obviously
homeowners are going to get completely whacked. This is going to kill the
mortgage market off, hit homeowners like crazy, and they’ll blame the
government.”
Sounding
the alarm over the worsening mortgage crunch, economists at the Resolution Foundation
thinktank warned total annual home loan payments were on course to rise by
£15.8bn by 2026 – delivering a £2,900 blow for the average household
remortgaging next year.
Up to 60%
of this mortgage timebomb was yet to hit consumers because millions of
households were still on fixed-rate deals struck before the Bank of England
started raising interest rates from a record low of 0.1% in December 2021.
Almost all
of the financial blow will land before the next election, which must be held by
28 January 2025, with households expected to face as much as £15bn in
additional payments in time for Christmas next year.
“This will
deliver a rolling living standards hit to millions of households in the run-in
to the next general election,” the thinktank said, warning that the average
two-year fixed mortgage was now expected to hit 6.25% later this year, and
would fall back to only about 4.5% in 2027.
According
to the figures from UK Finance, about 800,000 fixed mortgages will expire
before the end of this year, with a further 1.6m coming to an end in 2024. The
figures do not include variable rate and tracker mortgages, which will already
have risen sharply, or buy-to-let mortgages.
In total,
up to 4.4 million homeowners are expected to exit fixed deals between the start
of the Bank’s rate-hiking cycle and the end of 2024.
Less than a
third of UK households own their home with a mortgage, with the majority buying
a fixed-rate deal. However, renters are also being squeezed, as landlords pass
on higher costs by pushing up rents at some of the fastest rates on record.
With the
government under growing pressure over the cost of living crisis, politicians called
for urgent action to support the poorest households dealing with the surge in
borrowing costs.
Ed Davey,
the leader of the Liberal Democrats, has called for a £3bn emergency mortgage
protection fund to support those at risk of losing their homes because they
cannot keep up with payments.
“If we
don’t give that sort of help to those people, you’d see a spiral down and it
will hit the whole economy,” he told the BBC. “My worry is that we’re going to
see lots of other families losing their homes, and we could be in a spiral of
repossessions.”
Industry
figures show mortgage repossessions soared by 50% in the first quarter compared
with the final three months of 2022, though they remain substantially lower
than in previous years.
This week
Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, insisted the Bank of England must see through its
policy of raising interest rates to bring down inflation, despite the pressure
on households. The Treasury is understood to be wary that any intervention
could undermine Threadneedle Street’s efforts to tackle inflation.
Labour is,
however, seeking to capitalise by directly linking the turmoil in mortgage
markets to the government’s handling of the economy. “Every day now, the Tory
mortgage penalty is hitting more and more households across Britain,” said
Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor.
“Our
country has huge potential. We could be focused on building jobs and industries
of the future – but instead, the Tories crashed our economy and left working
people paying the price and our economy badly weakened.”
Observers
warned the weight of pressure on the government to act could become too
difficult to ignore as the Conservatives, trailing in the polls, prepare to
enter a tough election battle.
“If we were
a bit further away from the election cycle, it’d be easier for the government
to stay the course and let monetary policy do its work. Which is what the
Treasury wants,” said Alfie Stirling, the chief economist at the Joseph
Rowntree Foundation poverty charity.
“But I
think No 10 will look at what’s shaping up to become a tough election, and I think
it’ll be increasingly difficult for the government not to do something.”
A UK
Finance spokesperson said: “Around 800,000 mortgage customers are scheduled to
come off their fixed-rate deals later this year, and will likely face higher
monthly payments.
“If you’re
struggling with your finances, you should speak to your lender as early as
possible – don’t put it off. Lenders have a range of tailored options available
and will work with you to find the best one for your individual circumstances.”
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