Business

Halifax and First Direct join other lenders in announcing mortgage rate cuts

From Friday Halifax is reducing five-year fixed-rate mortgages by up to 0.71 percentage points, and two-year fixed-rate loans will fall by as much as 0.27 percentage points
From Friday Halifax is reducing five-year fixed-rate mortgages by up to 0.71 percentage points, and two-year fixed-rate loans will fall by as much as 0.27 percentage points From Friday Halifax is reducing five-year fixed-rate mortgages by up to 0.71 percentage points, and two-year fixed-rate loans will fall by as much as 0.27 percentage points

HALIFAX and First Direct have joined a stream of major lenders in announcing cuts to their mortgage rates.

Halifax said it is reducing five-year fixed-rate mortgages by up to 0.71 percentage points, and two-year fixed-rate loans will fall by as much as 0.27 percentage points.

The cuts will take effect from Friday.

Halifax is part of Lloyds Banking Group, which remained the UK's biggest mortgage lender last year, lending £52.7 billion in 2022, according to figures from trade association UK Finance.

First Direct said it has reduced rates across more than 20 of its two-, five- and 10-year fixed-rate mortgages by up to 0.20 percentage points, with immediate effect.

Chief executive Chris Pitt said: "Raising the money to buy a home can be a challenge at the moment and we want to help."

Several major mortgage lenders have been cutting rates this week, amid signs that stubbornly high inflation is easing.

The Bank of England uses base rate rises, which affect borrowing costs, as a tool to subdue inflation.

Among the rate reductions, HSBC UK has cut some home-buyer, first-time buyer and remortgage rates on offer by up to 0.35 percentage points, as well as adding a £500 cashback incentive to some deals.

Nationwide Building Society previously announced reductions of up to 0.55 percentage points on its fixed mortgage products from Wednesday.

And, earlier this week, TSB announced reductions of up to 0.40 percentage points to selected five-year fixed home-owner mortgages, with rates starting from 5.44 per cent.

Swap rates, which underpin fixed mortgage rates, have stabilised amid expectations that inflation is cooling.

UK Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation was 7.9 per cent in June, slowing from 8.7 per cent in May, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). This has fuelled expectations that the base rate may not need to climb so high.

Last week, the Bank of England raised the base rate from 5.00 per cent to 5.25 per cent - the 14th increase in a row.

According to Moneyfactscompare.co.uk, the average two-year fixed residential mortgage rate on Thursday is 6.83 per cent, unchanged from Wednesday.

The average five-year fixed residential mortgage rate is 6.33 per cent, down from an average rate of 6.34 per cent on Wednesday.