Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jul 17
UK Lenders Raise Mortgage Rates by Up to 0.35 Points as 2-Year Swaps Hit 4.22%
Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jul 17

UK Lenders Raise Mortgage Rates by Up to 0.35 Points as 2-Year Swaps Hit 4.22%

3 articles · Updated · Financial Times · Jul 17

Summary

  • Barclays, NatWest, Nationwide, Coventry Building Society and Virgin Money lifted fixed mortgage rates this week, reversing recent declines and raising borrowing costs for new and remortgaging homeowners.
  • Two-year UK swap rates climbed to 4.22% from 3.95% on June 26 as renewed Middle East hostilities rattled markets, pushing up the funding benchmarks lenders use to price fixed-rate mortgages.
  • Nationwide raised one two-year fix to 4.59% from 4.24%, adding about £480 a year on a £200,000, 25-year loan, while brokers warned more lenders are likely to follow quickly.
  • Borrowers still have some cheaper options—two-year fixes around 4.3% and tracker mortgages below 4%—especially if they expect the Bank of England to cut its 3.75% base rate later this year.
  • Even as rates rise, lenders are still competing selectively: Nationwide lowered the income threshold for six-times-salary loans to £75,000, and Lloyds offered Premier customers fixed deals starting at 4.13%.

Insights

As UK mortgage rates climb, is lending six times income a lifeline for buyers or a risky gamble for the housing market?
With the Bank of England's next rate decision looming, are lenders being forced to choose between affordability and profitability?
For US buyers in the UK, what hidden tax risks does the 'foreign-mortgage currency trap' create beyond rising interest rates?