Five interest rate hikes in less than a year have prompted a rush of remortgages as homeowners frantically search for cheaper options, rather than reverting to standard variable rate mortgages once their fixed rate deals expire. Since August 2006 the Bank of England base rate has jumped by 1.25 percentage points to its current rate of 5.75%, representing a real rise of almost 28% in the true cost of repaying mortgages. Borrowers on fixed rate deals due to expire and revert to standard variable rate, have been driving the fixed and discounted remortgage market.
However, many of those who have remortgaged may regret it in the near future as many analysts are predicting the end of the interest rate rises, with a maximum Bank of England rate of 6% predicted for the end of the year. If the analysts are right in their assumptions then homeowners would be better advised looking at SVR mortgages rather than opting for the fixed rate deals at the top of the market. Mortgages tied into the base rate, such as trackers are being favoured over discounted products as the latter can vary depending upon what rate the mortgage company decides to set their SVR, whereas a tie-in to the base rate leaves no room for doubt.
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