Mortgage rates have fallen as competition between lenders intensifies ahead of the Bank of England’s next rate decision.
The average rate for a two-year fixed deal, which had been very close to 6% at the start of the month, is now at 5.79%, according to the financial information service Moneyfacts. The average five-year rate is 5.39%.
The Nationwide has become the latest lender to move, by reducing its five-year fixed mortgages, for new customers moving home with a 40% deposit, to a rate of 3.99% plus a fee.
Mortgage analyst Kylie-Ann Gatecliffe said this could be the start of a “rate war” between the big banks.
The last time Nationwide – the UK’s biggest building society – offered rates below 4% was in February.
“Although this is only available for purchases right now, we hope that the re-mortgage market will follow,” said Sarah Tucker, founder of The Mortgage Mum.
Matt Smith, from property portal Rightmove, said: “We’ve seen average mortgage rates drop at a pace not seen for a while this week.
“The first sub 4% rate for those with larger deposits and prepared to pay a higher fee is the headline-grabber, but we’ve also seen some notable drops in rates in other loan-to-value brackets which should benefit more mass-market movers.”
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