One in 10 of today’s mortgagors risk being “imprisoned” by borrowing deals which are likely to make their repayments unaffordable as interest rates rise over the next four years according to new research from independent think tank the Resolution Foundation.
The study suggests that around 770,000 households fall into both of two potentially problematic categories of mortgage borrowers Firstly, those already at risk of being “mortgage prisoners” because of their limited ability to switch to better deals in order to insulate themselves against future rate rises.
Then there are those facing the likelihood of becoming “highly-geared” – with their monthly mortgage repayments eating up at least one-third of their disposable income by 2018 as interest rates rise. This most vulnerable group is therefore doubly exposed, the think tank said. They are likely to be restricted in their ability to renegotiate their borrowing – either because they have very low equity in their home (less than 5%) or because they are self-employed or have interest-only mortgages, categories which make borrowers less attractive to mortgage providers. At the same time, the level of their outstanding debt means that even the relatively modest rise in interest rates expected by 2018 will push them into the highly-geared category, the Resolution Foundation claimed.
The report said that instead of switching to more competitive deals (often on fixed-rates), this most vulnerable group will often have little option but to repay at their lender’s standard variable rate, leaving them fully exposed to changes in the Bank’s base rate – which is expected to climb to almost 3% by 2018, from the current rock-bottom level of 0.5% where it has been for five years.
The report emphasises that not all those with very low equity, who are self-employed or who have interest only mortgages will be in this most vulnerable group – it only comprises a smaller sub-section of borrowers who both fall into one of these categories and whose repayments will be more than one third of disposable income by 2018.
A much larger group – 2.3 million households or more than a quarter of the UK’s 8.4 million mortgagors –face potentially unaffordable repayments by 2018 based on current market expectations for interest rates. This is more than double the number of households in this position today (1.1 million). But in anticipation of rate rises, many of those facing potential affordability problems down the road will seek to refinance to improve their circumstances and secure some certainty over future payments.
Similarly, the overall population of those potentially at risk of being a “mortgage prisoner” is estimated by the Resolution Foundation to be around 3.5 million borrowers. But some of these will be able to successfully negotiate new terms – such as those who are self-employed on high or stable incomes, or those on an interest only deals who can afford to switch onto a repayment mortgage – and in most cases they will be able to bear the extra cost of rising interest rates. The Resolution Foundation’s new research is the first attempt to identify the smaller subset of most vulnerable borrowers who are likely to face affordability problems down the road when rates rise, and who are also at risk of being constrained in their ability to act now in the market to improve their position.
With interest rates at ultra-low levels since 2009, millions have been able to pay down their mortgages at unprecedentedly low monthly rates. A household on tracker mortgages with a £75,000 mortgage over this six-year period has netted a cumulative gain of around £12,400, compared to the cost of meeting the same mortgage before 2008, with households with larger mortgages benefitting by far more. This big mortgage windfall for many home-owners co-incided with a period of unprecedented falls in real wages and household incomes. Many households also failed to gain from the full reduction in interest rates and, as a result of these factors, the proportion of those with mortgages who reported they are struggling to make repayments only fell slightly during this period of rock-bottom interest rates.
Matthew Whittaker, chief economist at the Resolution Foundation and author of the report, said: “Many borrowers have enjoyed spectacular savings over recent years, with mortgage rates falling to historic lows, and most will be able to ride the tide of gradually rising interest rates. But for around one-in-four, even modest rate rises could create financial difficulties. Those at greatest risk are members of this group who also find themselves unable to access the best deals in the market today. Almost one in 10 households are doubly exposed: facing the prospect of their mortgage becoming increasingly unaffordable in the future and with the market offering them limited, if any, choice today.
“There is still a window of opportunity to think creatively about the best way of reducing the risk to this vulnerable group while we still have ultra-low interest rates. But that era is coming to an end relatively soon and the legacy of easy credit and the associated debt-overhang still has to be reckoned with. Financial institutions and policy-makers must consider now how best to minimise the scale of the adjustment problems these families face when interest rates start to return to normal.”