How are mortgage rates decided?


Updated on 19 April 2012 | 2 Comments

What factors determine the price you pay for your home loan?

Most of us will have one for a good chunk of our life, but how many of us actually know how mortgage rates are determined?

Well here’s a crash course in how lenders set the price you pay for your home loan…

Base rate

The rate you pay to borrow money for your mortgage is largely determined by the price the lender pays to get hold of it. And the biggest source of cash for lenders is the Bank of England, making the price this bank charges for lending – the base rate – a key factor in determining what you pay.

If the base rate is high, then lenders are paying more for their cash. This cost is passed on to you, the borrower, in the form of higher mortgage rates.

The base rate also has a direct impact on variable tracker mortgages. These deals are pegged at a certain level above (or below) the base rate, rising and falling with it. They come in lifetime versions – that will track the base rate forever – and fixed term versions, that will follow the rate for a set period. As the base rate is currently very low at 0.5%, these tracker mortgages are very cheap. However when the rate eventually rises, so will the amount you pay.

So if the base rate exerts such an influence on mortgage prices, why have some rates been rising recently – when the Bank of England rate has stayed low?

Money markets

Despite borrowing huge amounts from the Bank of England to fund (among other things) mortgages, lenders also borrow from each other. As with consumer borrowing, the rate the banks pay for this funding is determined by the risk of them not being able to pay it back. This risk can be broadly tracked by looking at the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (Libor) – the average rate at which banks are lending to each other.

Libor will climb if banks become exposed to an increased level of risk that might mean they cannot repay their loans. Unsurprisingly, as the Eurozone crisis has rumbled on, the Libor has increased. This rising cost of borrowing is then passed onto the homebuyer in the form of increased mortgage rates.

The level at which Libor trickles down to mortgage rates will depend on the amount the lender borrows from other commercial banks and the amount it borrows from the Bank of England.

Borrowing from the Bank of England will be cheaper. But the loan has to be collateralised against an asset. If a lender borrows from another bank, the amount does not have to be collateralised, but the rate will be higher. This is very similar to the difference between a secured personal loan – where you have to put up your car or house as a guarantee that you will repay the debt – and an unsecured loan, where no such asset is required.

Libor tends to be the big influence when it comes to pricing variable mortgages, but with fixed rate deals, swap rates play a bigger role. That's because Libor refers to the cost of the bank securing funding on a short-term basis - swap rates are the rates at which banks and building societies secure that cash over a longer period, allowing them to work out the rate to charge on a fixed rate deal. And there's no great science to swap rates - they are largely driven by sentiment, and what the market expects future interest rates to look like.

Holding cash

The levels at which a lender borrows from other commercial banks and the Bank of England will also depend on how readily each source is prepared to lend. Put simply: in tight financial conditions, banks lend less money to each other. This means that mortgage providers will turn to the Bank of England for funding, and the base rate will play a greater role in setting mortgage prices. If this happens, you would think mortgage rates would drop – as the base rate is so low. But remember, tight financial conditions will also push up the Libor, increasing the costs of borrowing for banks.

What’s more, regulatory changes brought in since the credit crunch have increased the amounts of capital lenders need to hold on their balance sheet to protect against bankruptcy or other financial bumps. These requirements mean that lenders have less cash to hand out, pushing up mortgage rates further.

Pricing in risk

In addition to pricing in the threat of defaults on funding from other banks, mortgage rates are also affected by the risk of house prices falling – something that is exaggerated in fragile economic times. This is why mortgage rates start to get considerably cheaper when you get to around the 40% deposit mark.

On the flipside, if you can only afford to put down a small deposit – say 15%, 10% or even 5% - you will be given a far higher interest rate. This is because house prices only need to drop by 10–15 percentage points for you to dip into negative equity (where your loan is worth more than the asset it is secured against).

Negative equity is very bad for homeowners, but it’s also a problem for banks. If you keep missing repayments and the lender decides to repossess, the house they will take on will be worth less than the loan they are owed.

Profit and competition

Mortgage providers obviously take a slice when dishing out home loan cash and need to turn a profit when lending out money. How much they take is a hot topic of dispute as some lenders have been keeping prices abnormally high when the base rate is historically low, creaming off a profit in the process.

General market movements and seasonal changes can also affect the mortgage rates offered by lenders. For example, if rafts of lenders start dropping rates, there’s a good chance the rest will as well – simply so that they are not trumped by competitors. Races to the bottom such as these often take off around spring, the traditional homebuying season.

And then there’s breaking iconic rate barriers, essentially a PR tactic. Put simply: banks know that dropping a mortgage rate below a round number will generate headlines – just look back through our mortgage articles if you don’t believe me. Last year saw several of these moves: five-year fixed rates dropping below 5%, and then below 4%, being two of the biggest. But be wary of these deals, they are often packaged up with hefty arrangement fees that could see a higher rate, but lower fee mortgage emerge as cheaper overall.

Brokers

So as you can see, there is no simple answer to what determines mortgage rates, just as there is no simple answer to what mortgage the average home hunter should take out. The best advice those that are taking out a mortgage can take on board is to fully research all the available options and – most important of all – speak to a mortgage broker.

More on mortgages:

Why gilt rates matter

Get a great mortgage for free!

Five reasons you need to remortgage today

Property asking prices hit record high - in the south

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