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The Right Mortgage: Discounts Vs Trackers

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By

Christina Jordan

From the Fool blog

Where To Invest In 2009

Published in Mortgages on 10 November 2008

Which kind of mortgage makes more sense in the current environment?

With interest rates tumbling, variable rate mortgages are coming into their own and existing borrowers are seeing their monthly repayments plummet.

Of course, how much you will benefit depends on which lender you are with, and whether you are on a discounted variable rate or a tracker.

What’s the difference?

A discounted variable rate is linked to your lender’s standard variable rate (SVR). For example, it might be a 1% discount from SVR. It rises and falls in line with the SVR which usually reflects (but does not mirror) the Bank of England Base Rate. The lender is under no obligation to ensure its SVR follows Base Rate movements, though they usually do.

A tracker rate is linked directly to the Base Rate, for example at a margin of 1%, and it therefore mirrors Base Rate movements. The lender has to automatically pass on any movements in Base Rate, usually within one month.

So, given its transparency, surely a tracker is better in a falling interest rate environment?

Tracker pros and cons

Well, the third of existing borrowers on a tracker have certainly benefitted from rates having been cut from 5% to 3% in the last two months. On average they have seen their monthly payments reduce by around £166. And their lenders have not been able to 'um' and 'ah' over whether to pass on the cuts. That’s the beauty of a tracker. No ifs, no buts.

Except for the big fat caveat that has emerged in recent weeks. That's the 'collar' that prevents trackers going below a certain level.

Collars mean that a mortgage rate cannot fall too far, no matter what happens to Base Rate. Nobody talked about them in the past, as they were buried in the small print of contracts and unlikely to come into play. But now that rates are tumbling, collars have been invoked and that stops tracker borrowers benefitting from future falls.

Even if rates fall to 0% (which is not beyond the realms of possibility), borrowers on a Halifax tracker may still have to pay 3% because of its collar. In other words they protect the lender from mortgage rates dropping too low.

Many lenders have collars at 3% leading some to predict the end of trackers as we know them, since they are no longer doing what are supposed to do if they cannot track Base Rate down.

It seems that trackers may have gone as low as they can go.

What about discounts?

Those on a discounted variable rate do not have the same certainty as tracker borrowers that Base Rate movements will be passed on in full, since they are linked to SVR.

This can actually be a benefit in a rising rate environment when some lenders look to gain a competitive advantage by not passing on all of a rise. However, in the current market the opposite is true and many lenders have not passed on all of the last two cuts in rate.

When the Base Rate was cut by 0.5% in October around half of lenders cut their SVR and of those many passed only a portion of the cut. HSBC for example didn’t pass on any of the cut and Northern Rock passed on only 0.15%.

It will take another week or so before it is clear which lenders have passed on last week’s massive 1.5% rate cut. C&G, Lloyd’s TSB, Halifax, Abbey, Nationwide and RBS have already bowed to political pressure and passed on the full cut – a boon for those on SVR and on discounted variable rates who will see their mortgage rate fall. For example, Nationwide’s standard variable rate is now just 4.69%.

But it is likely that many lenders will not be able to pass on the full 1.5% as their borrowing costs are currently much higher than the 3% Base Rate. Over 30 lenders still haven’t announced what they will do.

Rather than having a clear collar, discounted variable rates therefore have an ‘effective’ collar in that lenders simply cannot keep passing on rate cuts. Discounted rates can only move downwards if SVRs do – and many lenders have already said they cannot decrease their SVR further until borrowing costs reduce.

What next?

For new borrowers or those looking to remortgage, virtually all of the trackers on the market were pulled by lenders last week. The coming few weeks will see them repriced and relaunched but expect the margins to be higher than they were previously. If you want a tracker rate you choice is either HBSC’s attractive 3.99% term tracker or nothing. And that is only available to those with a 40% deposit.

Discounted rates are also few and far between – HSBC pulled its 5.29% lifetime discount last week for example and discounted deals are difficult to find. Plus those still being advertised are hard to assess. Market Harborough Building Society offers a discounted rate of 5.95%, but this is based on a 1.2% discount from its 7.15% SVR, and it has not yet announced whether it will be passing on the rate cut.

Until lenders announce their intentions it is hard for borrowers to work out which deals are the most attractive. But this time next week will be a whole different story.

More: How Will The Rate Cut Affect Your Mortgage?

> Speak to a broker for free at our mortgage service.

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

Someonesnotafool 11 Nov 2008 , 7:01am

Excellent article: It does fail to mention that Building societies like, and including the Furness decided that when the rate was cut by 0.5% to pass on only a small fraction, and give 30 days notice that they were removing the 'ceiling collar' which prevented them charging more than ~2.5% above the base rate. We have yet to here if they are to move on the more recent 1% base rate change; as with most, the change upwards is always far more expedient.

peter997 11 Nov 2008 , 8:40am

Makes for interesting reading when you have a number of mortgages, as I do. All buy-to-let and a range of lenders over the years. Checked with Northern Rock yesterday and they are passing on the full 1.5% which suddenly makes their SVR ompetitive for me. At 5.88% it is cheaper to leave it with them than move to a 5.44% with 2.5% fees and legals. Also you article made me look at a mortgage with The Mortgage Business and yes, there is the 3% collar buried in the small print.

Strebor19 11 Nov 2008 , 10:15am

My Fixed Mortgage came to a end this time last year and I swiftly remortgaged to a lifetime Tracker with Barclays/Woolwich. It is Base plus 0.48%. The latest drop of 1.5% will save me £200 per month, and previous drops have already saved a similar amount since January. Bring on 0% Base because having read my small print there is no lower coller. Just luck my Fixed Mortgage finished when it did else I would be stuck on Bank of Scotland SVR now! For once I did the right thing at the right time.

davidgpa 11 Nov 2008 , 10:49am

After the drop in the base rate, I searched for BTL trackers. All the (few) good ones have been withdrawn. Looks like their collective cold feet are now encased in ice.

mike8578 11 Nov 2008 , 2:10pm

Strebor. From my knowledge of the Barclays/Woolwich trackers the rate actually follows the Barclays Bank Base Rate. The only assurance that this follows the BOE rate appears to be verbally. As such I wouldn't be at all surprised if the Barclays base stopped following the BOE base if it dropped much further.

caro69 11 Nov 2008 , 4:52pm

Sorry mike8578. Barclays/Woolwich state, in writing, on their website:

Barclays Bank Base Rate - Barclays Bank Base Rate follows the Bank of England Base Rate, which can go up or down and is announced by the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee every month.

They have vowed, I believe, to track to as low as base rates dare to go.

Toni54 11 Nov 2008 , 6:39pm

Interested to know where in the small print Peter997 found out about the collar on The Mortgage Business buy-to-let trackers. I've looked and can't see anything about a collar. Also can't find any mention of a collar on my Birmingham Midshires buy-to-let tracker - but does anyone know?

Chorlton1 11 Nov 2008 , 7:18pm

Well on the excellent advice of this site I went for the Leek United tracker mortgage back in July 2007. It tracks 0.08% above the BoE base rate which was 5.5% back then. Nobody has mentioned about taking advantage that you can over pay on some trackers so I fixed the monthly payments at the rate I was paying when it was 5.5% might reduce the time down from 30 years a bit.

Smiley61 11 Nov 2008 , 7:19pm

Market forces at work.....

Two years ago you could get a tracker mortgage either at Base Rate or even below base rate.

Todays tracker rates are well above base rate. The Mortgage providers will always price them to make money. If base rates fall to 1%, be ready for the Base Rate +3% tracker!

That's not including the £999 arrangement fee.
(Never understood how one mortgage costs £299 to arrange and another £999, that's on for the Treasury Select Committee to get their teeth into after bank charges!)

guest200 11 Nov 2008 , 7:32pm

Chorlton1 said: " ... I fixed the monthly payments at the rate I was paying when it was 5.5% might reduce the time down from 30 years a bit."

You can get an idea by how much time it'll reduce the term here:-

http://calc-calc-calc.net/get/calc/Mortgage-Overpayment/

[Make sure you put your fixed monthly payment in the 'Minimum Monthly Payment' input.]

Chorlton1 11 Nov 2008 , 7:32pm

Oh and the collar on the Leek United Building Society tracker is 2.00%.

tooheys 11 Nov 2008 , 8:31pm

Does anyone know what Intelligent Finance are doing? I'm on a Base plus 0.09% two year deal until June 2009 and have tried to find in my mortgage contract whether the 1.5% base rate cut will trigger a collar, however there is no mention of a collar at all.

As Halifax have announced (I read somewhere else here) that their collar is 3%, I wonder if my mortgage has a collar as well (as IF is owned by Halifax).

When I spoke to someone at IF today, they said that no decision had been taken regarding passing on the recent cut. All previous cuts have been passed on to me and I tried to explain that what she was talking about relates to the SVR and as I have a tracker this should automatically be passed on. She was confused (!).

Any advise please?

Thanks.

enough1 11 Nov 2008 , 8:55pm

5 years ago when I remortgaged, I was told to pay £199 fees "to cover administrative costs". I thought that the one in charge of changing a few lines on a computer screen ie rate, length of mortgage and conditions was being paid a good deal of money. After all, as a teacher I don't even get that amount of money after 2 days work. 5 years later, reading some literature on mortgages and rates and deals, I find out that customers can be charged up to £1,995 for mortgage fees!!! Who does the secretarial work nowadays for banks and building societies to charge such fees? Rip-off Britain is!!!
Enough!!!

jumpexchange 12 Nov 2008 , 12:34am

Oh B*M!
I fixed my mortgage in April for 5 yrs when my previous fixed came to an end. The rate went up during the process of fixing . So now I get none of the advantage. My house went on the market in September as I need to relocate. If I had any chance of selling my house, I would ask whether to go for another fixed rate or a variable for the extra if we need it. We are tied in with the Nationwide until spring 2013. Actually, I leafleted all the houses I am interested in to see if any were interested in swapping or part exchanging with me and have had one reply - viewing each others this weekend - everyone cross your fingers for me!

vodkashot 12 Nov 2008 , 5:32pm

Some advice please? I was on the Halifax 4.39% Fixed which comes to an end 31 Dec 2008 and reverts to the SVR thereafter (currently 5%). Mortgage documents do say that the Halifax SVR will only ever be 2% above the BoE base rate, but they do have the option to raise this only after offering me an exit to another lender.

In the meantime, I have provisionally booked the Halifax 3 year tracker at the BoE base + 1.79% (£999 product fee) to start from 1 Jan 2009, although I am not obliged to take this up and have the option to simply stay on the SVR of my current mortgage. Still waiting to see the documentation of the new mortgage to determine if there is any collar (most likely will be).

Question I have is: Is it better to simply stick to the current mortgage, stay on the Halifax SVR (5%) which in most likelihood will come down further with further interest rate cuts rather than switch to the new BoE + 1.79% (=4.79%) 3 year Tracker with a £999 fee (and most likely a collar)? Paying the £999 fee and almost freezing the rate at 4.79% for 3 years due to the collar doesn't sound too sensible. Agree?

Assuming that rates do come down further along with LIBOR, there might be better long term Fixed rates in a few months - and perhaps get a 5/10 year fixed at 2-3% few months/years down the line?

guest200 13 Nov 2008 , 10:10am

Hi vodkashot,

This online calculator will compare the two mortgages for you:-

http://calc-calc-calc.net/get/calc/Mortgage-Comparison/v1/?L=150000&I1=5&Term1=20&I2=4.79&Yrs2=3&F2=999&Term2=20

I've put in a loan amount of £150,000 and term of 20 years, but you can change those to whatever your circumstances are.

It looks like they're actually very similar in cost, but the 4.79% with £999 fee might just cost a little more...

Chorlton1 13 Nov 2008 , 2:18pm

I still can't quite get my head round these arrangement fees which are going up and up what do they actually pay for? I paid mine up front because at the time it was only £595 but it must be a good money spinner for the banks and building societies if you add it to your mortagage and they get interest on it for 25 years plus as well.

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