Remortgage market remains stagnant

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Borrowers are staying on SVRs according to latest Halifax research.

The lender has found that although fixed rate mortgages have fallen by 164 basis points over the last five years, activity in the remortgage market continues to shrink, with volumes falling by 75% since 2007.

Analysis by Halifax has reviewed the changing demand for remortgage deals to see how SVRs and fixed rates have become relatively more or less attractive over the last five years:

This change in demand for remortgaging has had a significant impact on the level of lending in the market:

Further analysis shows that:

Research shows that just 10% of borrowers would look to change deals if they saw an increase in their monthly payments between £25 and £50. 13% say that their monthly payment would need to go up by £100 before they consider switching to a fixed deal and 8% of borrowers say that they would only consider switching products if their monthly payments doubled.

Therefore, the Halifax says, although fixed rates are becoming cheaper, research suggests that the benefit of moving to a fixed deal needs to be greater for the majority of borrowers, some homeowners, however should weigh up the overall cost of remortgaging alongside the certainty provided by fixed monthly payments.

“The remortgage market has been slower since 2008, and with SVRs at historically low levels it’s easy to understand why,’ said Stephen Noakes, mortgage director at Halifax.

“In today’s market significant numbers of borrowers feel the right decision is to remain on a Standard Variable Rate, a very different decision to the historical norm where customers who stayed put and didn’t remortgage saw a sizeable increase in their monthly payment.

“Over the last few months, SVRs have gone up and fixed rates have come down, but as our customer research shows, borrowers are only willing to consider remortgaging if it means their monthly payments become significantly cheaper. This attitude has fundamentally changed the demand for remortgaging in today’s market and points to the reason for remortgage levels being at historical lows.”

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