Do you want to discuss boring politics? (83 Viewers)

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Practical question. Interest rates going up, and we currently have the mortgage in place to buy a property. But, surely, prices will go down as interest rates go up?

So... better to sit tight as we are, or bail? A new mortgage would mean paying more for the same amount, but surely, *surely* house prices will dip at least a little?!?

I don't know what the correction was post GFC, 20% ish? Though I guess that differed from place to place.

If you take the mortgage as is fixed for a long period you're likely to get a better rate than next time you look.

In the scenario that the property you're buying decreases in value by 10% over the next year - interest rates are due to go up significantly anyway which may also impact the LTV of your mortgage which could push your payments right up. I'd probably be inclined to get in now with a long term fix, unless you're buying to sell on it is only a paper value.
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
Not sure what all the fuss is about regarding the National Anthem at Conference. It's just showing respect. It was sung at Luton and Brum - I didn't join in as I'm not a monarchist - but I have no issue with those who wanted to sing it. I guess it will be sung on Saturday too as it's our first home game since the Queen died. Again, I won't sing, but some will. We won't do it again and neither will Labour.

More important is the news that some letters of no confidence are going in for Truss already. The Tories are imploding.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
The best argument to have stuck with Boris seems to be Liz Truss as PM, if they get rid of Truss the best argument for keeping Truss will be who is available to replace her.

If this lot were true patriots they’d call a GE now, the Tories are already scrapping the bottom of the barrel for talent, it’s not right that they choose another PM worse than the last one.
 

Nick

Administrator
@Nick can we get a clown emoji added to anybody who has admitted to voting Conservative in 2019 please?

I am a donor.


giphy.gif
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
The afternoon of the ‘mini budget’ I heard 1% next month. BoE shouldve probably raised by 0.75% last month anyway but they’ll have to rise even more now

Just seen the markets are pricing in rises of 1.75% by end of Nov😳

The markets don’t like to see minimal/no fiscal discipline. It was one of the issues I had with Corbyn but to be honest I’d prefer a couple of his investment spends than some of what Truss/Kwarteng are doing. The markets mayve accepted the energy plan on its own, but stuff like the top rate tax cut (which is relative small policy in grand scheme of things) is probably viewed as totally unnecessary at present and demonstrates that lack of discipline
You can’t blame the BOE for not raising interest rates enough pre budget, especially a budget that the government was selling as a mini budget. This is on the government. The market is shitting it’s pants of the back of the budget not the actions of the BOE.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Practical question. Interest rates going up, and we currently have the mortgage in place to buy a property. But, surely, prices will go down as interest rates go up?

So... better to sit tight as we are, or bail? A new mortgage would mean paying more for the same amount, but surely, *surely* house prices will dip at least a little?!?
You’d think they may crash
 

Razzle Dazzle Dean Gordon

Well-Known Member
Practical question. Interest rates going up, and we currently have the mortgage in place to buy a property. But, surely, prices will go down as interest rates go up?

So... better to sit tight as we are, or bail? A new mortgage would mean paying more for the same amount, but surely, *surely* house prices will dip at least a little?!?
What sort of rate have you got? They're increasing rapidly so any saving you make on the purchase price you could lose in higher interest rates anyway. I've got 3 sections to my mortgage currently (2 much smaller chunks taken out for major works on the house), the smaller 2 revert to the SVR in March next year, November next year and then the main mortgage in March 2024, can't decide whether to take the hit on early repayment (and much higher payments now) at fixing on a much higher rate than i'm currently on...or sitting tight and hoping rates have come right down by this time next year.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
What sort of rate have you got? They're increasing rapidly so any saving you make on the purchase price you could lose in higher interest rates anyway. I've got 3 sections to my mortgage currently (2 much smaller chunks taken out for major works on the house), the smaller 2 revert to the SVR in March next year, November next year and then the main mortgage in March 2024, can't decide whether to take the hit on early repayment (and much higher payments now) at fixing on a much higher rate than i'm currently on...or sitting tight and hoping rates have come right down by this time next year.
Fortunately I've got a couple of years left of my fix but just checked the best I could get now from my current provider, CBS, and my monthly payments would increase about 50% even before another hike in base rate.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Practical question. Interest rates going up, and we currently have the mortgage in place to buy a property. But, surely, prices will go down as interest rates go up?

So... better to sit tight as we are, or bail? A new mortgage would mean paying more for the same amount, but surely, *surely* house prices will dip at least a little?!?
What a conundrum. Glad I’m not in your position. There’s so many potential variables. Assuming you have a fixed rate on the mortgage agreement? If so how long is it fixed for? If mortgage rates go through the roof at least short term how exposed are you going to be to having a mortgage that you can’t afford when your fixed rate ends? I think in your shoes I’d be working on the expectation that the rates are going to continue to rise for the next year, maybe 2 with the expectation that at the end of your fix term you could be looking at another 4% on what it currently is,

It’s so hard to predict the market but I think it’s right to assume that prices are going to at least stall if not start falling, the risk of negative equity wouldn’t bother me too much because I think ultimately the value will come back. The risk overpaying now compared to in a years time albeit with a far more expensive mortgage repayments.

Can’t help but feel ultimately it’s a dammed if you do dammed if you don’t situations.
 

Razzle Dazzle Dean Gordon

Well-Known Member
Fortunately I've got a couple of years left of my fix but just checked the best I could get now from my current provider, CBS, and my monthly payments would increase about 50% even before another hike in base rate.
If I bit the bullet and fix now I reckon we're talking an extra £300 a month. there must be loads of people out there who can't afford that in any circumstances. GE isn't until 2024 is it so a marked change in direction to effect some change seems remote in the short-term too.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
What sort of rate have you got? They're increasing rapidly so any saving you make on the purchase price you could lose in higher interest rates anyway. I've got 3 sections to my mortgage currently (2 much smaller chunks taken out for major works on the house), the smaller 2 revert to the SVR in March next year, November next year and then the main mortgage in March 2024, can't decide whether to take the hit on early repayment (and much higher payments now) at fixing on a much higher rate than i'm currently on...or sitting tight and hoping rates have come right down by this time next year.
Same literally the same for me. I think it’s a wait and see if the whole thing Implodes. Can’t help feeling sorry for some of the utility companies that had to go to the wall. I think things are happening so fast that even by the end of the year there could be a general election
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
You can’t blame the BOE for not raising interest rates enough pre budget, especially a budget that the government was selling as a mini budget. This is on the government. The market is shitting it’s pants of the back of the budget not the actions of the BOE.

I’m not blaming them at all. My post was quite clear what/who is to blame for markets reaction

My comment was that I thought they should’ve raised 0.75% last week, even without the budget. This would’ve been the same as ECB and Feds recent rises

For what it’s worth I also thought BoE should’ve raised rates earlier and stopped printing money sooner. Nothing to do with current market reaction, just my view
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Same literally the same for me. I think it’s a wait and see if the whole thing Implodes. Can’t help feeling sorry for some of the utility companies that had to go to the wall. I think things are happening so fast that even by the end of the year there could be a general election
I am getting a little anxious over it and a little tearful
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
What a mess the country is in. Me and the wife were reminiscing last night about how we were saying in 2009 that at least all this happening now means our children will leave school into a better economic environment than friends of ours who had kids much much younger than us and their kids were left or just leaving school, my eldest has just entered her GCSE year and I’m now doubting that this shit will be sorted and the economic prospects of the country will be any more positive by the time she’s completed A levels in 2024. 12 wasted years in sorting out a world banking crash in 2008. The Tories have just made it worse with every turn.
 

Terry Gibson's perm

Well-Known Member
We renewed our mortgage last year on a five year fixed just looked and it would be £202 per month if we were doing it now with the same lender and £150 with another.

It is already causing problems as houses used to sell in the first few days in my area now it’s taking weeks or months.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
I don't know what the correction was post GFC, 20% ish? Though I guess that differed from place to place.

If you take the mortgage as is fixed for a long period you're likely to get a better rate than next time you look.

In the scenario that the property you're buying decreases in value by 10% over the next year - interest rates are due to go up significantly anyway which may also impact the LTV of your mortgage which could push your payments right up. I'd probably be inclined to get in now with a long term fix, unless you're buying to sell on it is only a paper value.
Will reply to your's as much as anybody's(!)

Yeah, it's inevitable that if the offer lapses, the next offer will cost more to receive the same amount. However, over the past 18 months or so, what we've been able to afford has also decreased, as house prices have risen. It's quite a large deposit vs mortgage at least.

It's also complicated by the fact that after the survey (yes @chiefdave it seems I hired a diligent one in the end ;)) we have to renegotiate the price. It also means the works needed doing mean we probably have to hang on where we're currently living for a few months - the original plan was to rent it out, but then the plan changed to sell it after the work had been done... but that risks buying high, and selling low!

One thing I am grateful is that the mortgage advisor recommended fixing for two years, and I thought he was mad and went against that to go for five years. I think I'll probably be proved right(!)
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
We renewed our mortgage last year on a five year fixed just looked and it would be £202 per month if we were doing it now with the same lender and £150 with another.

It is already causing problems as houses used to sell in the first few days in my area now it’s taking weeks or months.
Noticed that too Terry. Everything in Rugby was selling pretty much the moment it went on the market, a house around the corner from us has had the for sale board up for 4 weeks now, not seen that in our area for a good couple of years.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
We renewed our mortgage last year on a five year fixed just looked and it would be £202 per month if we were doing it now with the same lender and £150 with another.

It is already causing problems as houses used to sell in the first few days in my area now it’s taking weeks or months.
Good timing!!
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
The markets don’t like to see minimal/no fiscal discipline. It was one of the issues I had with Corbyn but to be honest I’d prefer a couple of his investment spends than some of what Truss/Kwarteng are doing.
Worth reiterating. They're doing everything they took Corbyn to task for suggesting in terms of borrow huge wadges of cash from seemingly nowehere, without a fraction (or, indeed, any!) of his social conscience!

At least he was doing because he felt it was for the good of the majority!
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Ken Clarke slams Kwarteng's mini-budget as like something 'usually tried in Latin American countries without success'
Ken Clarke, the former chancellor and a Conservative peer, has condemned the mini-budget as the sort of plan “usually tried in Latin American countries without success”. In an interview on Radio 4’s The World This Weekend, he also said he was expecting a serious recession this winter.

He said:
I don’t accept – I never have, the Conservative party never has – the overall premise of the budget, which is that you make tax cuts for the wealthiest 5%, and it makes them work so much harder, and [there’s a] rush to invest. I’m afraid that’s the kind of thing that’s usually tried in Latin American countries without success.

I do not think you stimulate growth by cutting taxes on the better-off, or taxes on business. If it was so simple, we would have got rid of taxes all together some time ago.

What the increased spending power … is going to do is run the risk of further stimulating inflation. And we’re going into a serious inflationary recession this winter.

He also said there was nothing Thatcherite about what Liz Truss was doing.

We’re going into over 100% debt [of GDP]. We’re heading in the Italian direction. That is going to be a problem, a very great problem, in the short term if it leads to a collapse in the pound and the loss of confidence in our economy. We’re going to drive investment away, not attract it.

I don’t think anybody I was ever in government with would have contemplated a budget like this.
 

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