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Mortgages
mortgage advice
mortgages advice
morgage advice
Here
we have tried to provide a brief explanation for some of the most
common mortgage terms and features.
This could be called
either a repayment or capital and interest loan. This mortgage
is designed to fully repay the initial sum over the term of the loan.
The lender calculates the monthly payment required which will be part
capital and part interest. In the early years the majority of your
payments will be interest and the balance reduces slowly.
As the name
suggests, you only pay the lender the interest due each month on your
mortgage. You do not make any capital repayments and the balance of
your mortgage will remain constant and does not decrease. It is your
responsibility to maintain some vehicle or plan which will repay the
debt at the end of the term. This could be an endowment plan, pension
or ISA for example. You could actually utilise any method you choose,
ensuring that the loan is repaid on time will be your responsibility
not the lender’s.
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This refers to when
the interest on your loan is calculated. It could be
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once a year
(yearly rest) |
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each month
(monthly rest) |
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each day (daily
rest) |
This is mainly
beneficial for repayment loans when the debt is actually decreasing
and has no effect for interest only loans. For repayment loans it
would be beneficial to have a monthly rest account as the interest
owed is recalculated each time you make a payment and reduce your
debt. For people with a current account
flexible mortgage with an active transaction pattern, daily rest
would be more useful.
Yearly rest is an
outdated method of calculation but is still widely used amongst
lenders. They calculate the interest due at the beginning of each year
and effectively ignore capital payments you make until the next review
date in 12 months time.
This is the
lender’s “normal” mortgage interest rate. Each lender sets their own
SVR, which then may vary according to the Bank of England rate
changes. Most discounted rates are based on the SVR.
If you start your
mortgage on a fixed or discounted rate then you would normally revert
to the SVR once your special terms have expired. Depending on any
redemption penalties you
may then move your mortgage to a new special deal and lower your
payments.
Tracker rates are now commonly available on a wide variety of
mortgages. Essentially, they track the Bank of England (BoE) base
rate. This differs from the SVR above which lenders are at liberty to
change to suit their own requirements. The 'tracker rate' can only
change when the Bank of England rate changes, for some a much fairer
scenario. Tracker rates tend to carry an additional fixed interest
rate that the lenders charge. For example BoE plus 1.00%. You would
pay the BoE base rate plus 1% that the lender charges on top. Overall,
this can be cheaper than opting for the lenders SVR.
This is based on the
SVR less a fixed discounted
percentage. You pay the reduced rate for the period of the special
product offer. Most lenders have a good selection of discounted rates
over different terms. If rates change your 'discounted' rate will also
change; either up or down.
This option will fix
your interest rate for a set period of time regardless of movements in
interest rates during the same period. This provides certainty in
knowing the payments will not change, but can be a disadvantage if
interest rates subsequently reduce, leaving you at the higher rate.
This is a style of
fixed rate but with the advantage that you could benefit from further
interest reductions. Capped rates are not widely available.
Initially the rate
charged is capped at a certain level for a set period of time. This
means that if interest rates rise your payment will increase but only
as far as the capped level. However, if rates fall below the capped
rate, your payments will reduce.
Capped rates are
generally more expensive than fixed rates over the same period of
time.
This type of deal
will give you back a percentage of your loan as a cash sum.
Because you have received such a large benefit initially, the interest
rate charged on your mortgage will generally be the
SVR or an even higher rate.
There will certainly be a redemption period
with this type of loan. |
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A re-mortgage simply
involves moving or transferring a current mortgage to a new lender.
This can also include raising extra capital by increasing the loan
size. Most lenders offer attractive terms to secure this business from
their competitors and large savings can be made.
These are a fairly
new type of mortgage but more lenders are adopting it as an option.
The rules and features will vary from lender to lender as the account
is quite complex.
Generally lenders
will allow overpayments, underpayments, payment holidays and the
ability to have access to previous overpayments. Some lenders attach
current and savings accounts to the loan or even credit cards and
personal loans. As the debt is secured on your property, the interest
rates charged should normally be lower than on other unsecured
options.
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Many schemes
allow you to use savings accounts to offset against your main
mortgage:
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Example |
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£70,000
loan |
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less |
£4,000
total savings |
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£66,000
interest charged on net amount |
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Some lenders will
grant you an overall
mortgage credit facility at outset. You may then
choose to spend some of this on virtually any legal purpose you
choose. You will be charged interest at the prevailing rate but do not
have to “apply” each time you need access to the funds, as this has
been agreed at outset. |
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Most schemes, not
all, will have some kind of redemption penalty. This fee is payable
when you repay or reduce your mortgage within the penalty period.
It is generally
expresses as a percentage of the amount repaid or a certain number of
months’ interest. Many lenders will now allow part reductions of up to
25% of the initial loan without incurring a penalty.
If your scheme is
portable, you will be allowed to “port” your special terms to your new
property and thus not incur a penalty. All lenders apply different
criteria so you should check beforehand.
This is the period
of time during which redemption
penalties will be payable (as above). You should be aware that a
penalty period can be longer than the special product period,
e.g. a 2 year fixed rate could have a 3 year penalty period.
These are generally
available for customers who are not moving but wish to transfer their
mortgage to a new lender on special terms. The new lender will
generally pay, or waive, any application fees, valuation fees and
legal fees up to set limits. They will not pay any redemption
penalties incurred in the transfer. A useful way of transferring your
mortgage on to a lower payment rate without any initial costs.
This is a new term
to describe Equity Release mortgages and Home Reversion schemes.
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