The average Telford mortgage is £74,964
I have to ask by how much Telford homeowners (on variable rate or tracker mortgages) will see their repayments increase? In the TF1-5 and TF7 postcodes there are 20,776 homeowners with a mortgage, of which 8,925 have a variable rate mortgage (the remaining have fixed rate mortgages). The total amount owed by those TF1-5 and TF7 homeowners with those variable rate mortgages is £669,085,306, meaning the average monthly mortgage payment for those home owners on variable rate mortgages before the interest rate rise was £584.51 per month and now its £600.13 per month … meaningThe interest rate rise will cost Telford
homeowners on average an extra £187.41 per year
Whilst this is the first raise in interest rates in over 10 years, it must be noted it is at a significantly low level compared to figures in the 1970s and early 1990s. Many of my readers talk of interest rates at 17 per cent when Sir Geoffrey Howe increased them to try and combat the hyperinflation (from the fallout of the financial crisis that hit Britain in the 1970’s) and Norman Lamont in September 1992 with the infamous Black Wednesday crisis, when interest rates were raised from 10% to 15% in just one day. So, what will this interest rate actually do to the Telford housing market? Well, if I’m being frank – not a great deal. The proportion of Telford homeowners with variable rate mortgages (and thus directly affected by a Bank of England rate rise) will be smaller than in the past, in part because the vast majority of new mortgages in recent years were taken on fixed interest rates. The proportion of outstanding mortgages on variable rates has fallen to a record low of 42.3 per cent, down from a peak of 72.9 per cent in the autumn of 2011. If more Telford people are protected from interest rate rises, because they are on a fixed rate mortgage, then there is less chance of those Telford people having to sell their Telford properties because they can’t afford the monthly repayments or even worse case scenario, have them repossessed. However, and this will be of interest to both Telford homeowners and Telford buy to let landlords … .. for every 1% increase in the Bank of England interest rate, it will cost the average Telford homeowner on a variable rate mortgage £62.47 per month So, what next? Because UK inflation levels are at 2.9 per cent (the country’s highest rate since April 2012) and the Bank of England is tasked by HM Government to keep inflation at 2 per cent using various monetary tools (one of which is interest rates) – you can see why interest rate rises might be on the cards in the future as increasing interest rates tends to dampen inflation. Now of course there is a certain amount of uncertainty with regard to Brexit and the negotiations thereof, but fundamentally the British economy is in decent shape. People will always need housing and as we aren’t building enough houses (as I have mentioned many times in the Telford Property Blog), we might see a slight dip in prices in the short term, but in the medium to long term, the Telford property market will always remain strong for both Telford homeowners and Telford landlords alike.