logo
Millions of homeowners to see mortgage payments rise

Millions of homeowners to see mortgage payments rise

BBC News09-07-2025
Millions of British households are facing an average £107 rise in monthly mortgage payments as their deals expire, according to the Bank of England. It has said that 3.6 million home loans are coming up for renewal over the next three years, equating to 41% of all outstanding mortgages. But the number of mortgages facing expiry is less than the Bank of England had initially expected and the monthly hike is below the £146 increase it had first anticipated.While some bills will rise, a fall in interest rates is slowly feeding its way into typical monthly mortgage payments following four cuts by the Bank of England since last August.
Around 2.5 million households, or 28% of mortgage holders, will see their bills fall in the next three years.Meanwhile, first-time buyers are likely to get more access to mortgages as banks and building societies are allowed to loosen a cap on riskier lending. In its latest Financial Stability Report, the Bank of England's governor Andrew Bailey said at present just under 10% of new mortgages issued exceed 4.5 times a borrower's income. He said he would be happy to see that percentage rise. Individual banks and building societies will be allowed to exceed a 15% limit on higher loan-to-value mortgages.The looser cap comes after a call by the UK government for regulators to look for ways to encourage economic growth.The Bank reckons the change could lead to up to 36,000 new higher loan-to-income mortgages a year. But the mortgage lending industry as a whole will have to stick to a 15% limit on riskier home loans.
Elsewhere, the bank said financial instability across the globe had increased, after the US-led global trade war.While there had been little direct impact so far on British households and companies, some significant changes were occurring to the global financial system.In particular the traditional strengthening of the US dollar as a safe haven in times of turmoil appeared to have changed since the start of the global tariff war.Investors and large companies who never previously felt the need to hedge or insure against a weak dollar were now doing so, the Bank said.This has added to the weakness of the US dollar this year, which is already down about 10% against a range of currencies.US president Donald Trump has said he wants a weaker dollar, arguing that will boost exports and US manufacturing jobs growth.However, imported goods can get more expensive, adding to any price rises from tariffs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dollar drifts as investors ponder Fed independence ahead of Powell speech
Dollar drifts as investors ponder Fed independence ahead of Powell speech

Reuters

timea few seconds ago

  • Reuters

Dollar drifts as investors ponder Fed independence ahead of Powell speech

SINGAPORE, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar drifted on Thursday as investors fretted about the Federal Reserve's independence after yet another attack from President Donald Trump ahead of remarks from Chair Jerome Powell later this week that could influence the outlook for rates. Trump called on Fed Governor Lisa Cook to resign on the basis of allegations made by one of his political allies about mortgages she holds in Michigan and Georgia, intensifying his effort to gain influence over the U.S. central bank. Cook said she had "no intention of being bullied to step down" from her position at the central bank. Trump has also told aides he is considering trying to fire Cook, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday. "It has the potential to raise questions around the Fed's oversight and regulatory functions but it has little to no near-term monetary policy implications," said Prashant Newnaha, senior Asia-Pacific rates strategist at TD Securities. That explained the relatively muted reaction in the currency markets to the news as the dollar initially dipped on the news but was mostly calm into the Asian session. The Japanese yen held onto gains made in previous sessions and was little changed at 147.41 per dollar, while the euro was steady at $1.1642. Sterling last fetched $1.34535. That left the dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against six other peers, steady at 98.301. Trump has repeatedly criticised Powell for being too slow to cut rates, stoking investor worries about the central bank's independence and its credibility. Investors expect Trump will replace Powell with a more dovish appointment when his term ends in May. Trump earlier this month said he would nominate Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Stephen Miran to serve out the final few months of a vacant Fed seat after Adriana Kugler unexpectedly resigned. Kristina Clifton, a senior economist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney, said if Cook resigns it would create another opening for Trump to appoint a Fed Governor who will vote to lower interest rates. "Perceived political interference in the Federal Reserve can undermine its independence, steepening the yield curve and denting the USD's safe haven status." The main focus this week has been on whether Powell will push back against market expectations for a rate cut at the Fed's September 16-17 meeting when he speaks on Friday at the Jackson Hole meeting, following a weak jobs report for July. "Markets are adamant that recent labour market data necessitates some policy calibration and are expecting Chair Powell to tip his hat in that direction," TD's Newnaha said. Traders are pricing in an 82% chance of a 25-basis-point rate cut next month, CME FedWatch tool showed. While the odds have lowered from last week after hotter than expected producer price inflation tempered expectations, investors are still pricing in over 50 bps of easing this year. Some analysts cautioned that markets could end up being disappointed by Powell's speech, noting that the impact of Trump's tariffs on inflation remains uncertain. "It is not clear that Powell will deliver strong guidance," said Benoit Anne, managing director in the investment solutions group at MFS Investment Management. If the dovish signals elude us, there will be significant pricing out of the odds for a September cut." In other currencies, the New Zealand dollar was nursing steep overnight losses at $0.58205 after diving 1.2% to its lowest level since April. New Zealand's central bank cut interest rates on Wednesday as expected but left the door wide open to yet more easing if needed. The Australian dollar eased 0.13% to $0.64245, hovering near a two-week low.

China's Bio-Thera Solutions licenses its arthritis drug to  Germany's STADA
China's Bio-Thera Solutions licenses its arthritis drug to  Germany's STADA

Reuters

timea few seconds ago

  • Reuters

China's Bio-Thera Solutions licenses its arthritis drug to Germany's STADA

HONG KONG, Aug 21 (Reuters) - China's Bio-Thera Solutions ( opens new tab said on Thursday it has granted Germany's STADA Arzneimittel commercialisation rights for its arthritis drug BAT1806, opens new tab in the EU, UK, Switzerland, certain Middle East and North Africa regions, and certain members of the Commonwealth of Independent States. Upfront payment and milestone payments will total up to 136 million euros ($158.34 million), including an 8.5 million euro down payment, milestone payments up to 127.5 million euros, and a double-digit percentage of net sales as revenue sharing, the Shanghai-listed firm said in a stock exchange filing, opens new tab. ($1 = 0.8589 euros)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store