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Rates held at 0.5% and homeowners finally get to feel benefits

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Published Date: 10 April 2009
HOMEOWNERS are beginning to benefit from cheaper fixed-rate mortgages as a result of interest rates being at a historic low.
Figures released yesterday by the Bank of England showed that average interest rates paid on two-year fixed deals for people with a 25 per cent deposit had fallen from 4.35 per cent in February to 4.01 per cent last month – the lowest for five-and-a-
half years.

The Bank's monetary policy committee (MPC) yesterday kept its base lending rate at 0.5 per cent. There have been repeated complaints that lenders have not passed on successive base-rate cuts, which have seen the rate fall from 5 per cent last October.

Just over half of Britain's 11.8 million mortgages are on fixed rates, which are unaffected by base rate changes. But yesterday's figures show cheaper fixed deals are now available for homeowners looking to take out a new mortgage.

Variable rate deals are at their cheapest for 14 years and stand at 4.03 per cent last month.

However, savers receive little return on their deposits – the average interest on a tax-free ISA account was a mere 0.63 per cent last month. Last October it was 4.36 per cent.

The Bank said its strategy of "quantitative easing" (QE) – or buying up government debts from banks to effectively "print money" and increase the amount of currency in circulation – was continuing. It has injected £26.4 billion, just over a third of a planned £75 billion.

The Bank has resorted to QE because its usual measure of stimulating the economy – cutting interest rates – is no longer an option.

IHS Global Insight economist Howard Archer said that interest rates could be held at record lows "well into 2010".

He added: "QE is clearly now at the forefront of the Bank of England's attempts to stimulate economic recovery, not only because the Bank rate has fallen as low as it can effectively go, but also because the lack of availability of credit is a serious threat to recovery prospects."





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1

For Scotlands Future,

Vote For The SNP 10/04/2009 00:52:29
Home owners in Scotland have been benefiting from a council-tax freeze for two years, and I bet that saving amounts to a lot more than the mortgage saving.
2

Silence of the Yams,

10/04/2009 16:37:23
If they are lending at an inflated 4%, but paying no interest on deposits it's a joke in my view.
3

Tormod,

Auld Reekie 11/04/2009 13:27:01
The need to go up, inflation has been given all mighty booster rockets you cannot turn these economics around over night.

I agree 1 I think that they are doing a scorthed earth policy.
4

Luke Skywalker,

05/05/2009 11:39:45
I have never taken a fixed rate mortgage. They only become available when the banks anticipate that rates will go down in the immediate future. Equally a fixed price fuel deal is dodgy too. They only become available when the utilities consider fuel prices will fall. My tracker mortgage is now down to 0.67%. Also, although there are some less bad deals available there is usually a huge arrangement fee so READ THE SMALL PRINT before you sign. Don't be taken in by the bank's salesperson.

 

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