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Rates may see no-interest mortgages

Updated on 10 November 2008

Source PA News

Some homeowners could be enjoying an interest-free mortgage next year if interest rates continue to fall steeply, it has been disclosed.

Cheltenham & Gloucester, which is part of Lloyds TSB, offered a two-year tracker mortgage of 1.01% below the Bank of England base rate in July and August 2007.

The deal means that if interest rates fall to 1%, as many economists are predicting, people who took out the loan will not have to pay any interest on their mortgage at all, and will only have to make capital repayments.

With the base rate at 3%, homeowners who took out one of the loans are currently paying interest of just 1.99% - the lowest rate members of the industry can remember.

Anyone who took out the loan on an interest-only basis will have monthly mortgage costs of just £165.83 on a £100,000 loan, while those with a repayment mortgage will be paying £423 a month.

But borrowers had to pay a fee of 2.5%, or £2,500 on a £100,000 mortgage, to take out the deal, and once this is taken into account the so-called pay rate is considerably higher, although still highly competitive, at the equivalent of base rate plus 0.24%.

It is not just borrowers with Cheltenham & Gloucester who could see their mortgage rate fall below 1% if interest rates continue to be cut.

In August 2007 the Co-operative Bank was offering a two-year tracker at 0.61% below base rate and Nationwide also had one of 0.27% below.

But these deals only run for two years, meaning that borrowers who are currently on them will have to remortgage within the next 12 months on to considerably higher rates, or stay on their lender's standard variable rate.

However, people who took out lifetime tracker mortgages have the rate they pay in relation to base rate fixed for the life of the mortgage.

These news feeds are provided by an independent third party and Channel 4 is not responsible or liable to you for the same.

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