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Interest rates rise: What it means for your money

Bank of England interest rates: pound coin and note
The Bank of England raised interest rates by 0.25 percentage points to 1.25%. Photo: Daniel Harvey Gonzalez/In Pictures via Getty Images (Daniel Harvey Gonzalez via Getty Images)

After five rate rises in six months, we’re seeing the fastest cumulative interest rate rise since the end of 1988 – and it’s not over yet. The Bank of England now expects inflation to peak at an incredible 11% in October. It estimates that at that point the energy price cap will rise an eye-watering 40%, and that once the government’s cost-of-living payments kick in, they’ll add another 0.1 percentage points to inflation. So while the Bank has to wrestle with the opposing forces of trying to avoid damaging the economy and keeping a lid on inflation, it’s going to have to keep raising rates in the months to come.

It has taken a long time for higher rates to feed through into the savings and mortgage markets, but deals have started creeping northwards.

Read more: Bank of England raises UK interest rates to 13-year high of 1.25%

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For savers, making the most of the rises means considering both the providers and the corners of the market where the best deals are on offer. For mortgage borrowers, meanwhile, whether you’re on a variable rate and facing another horrible hike, or on a fixed rate and worrying about what happens when it comes to an end, shopping around is key.

What it means for you: mortgages

Bank of England interest rates impact on mortgages: UK houses
HSBC and NatWest announced a mortgage rate hike as soon as Bank of England published it's decision on interest rates on Thursday. Photo: Matt Cardy/Getty Images (Matt Cardy via Getty Images)

Anyone on a variable rate mortgage will be braced for impact again, as a fifth rise in six months kicks in. If you’re one of the 1.1 million people on a standard variable rate mortgage, or one of the 850,000 with a tracker, it’s going to hurt. Someone with a £300,000, 25-year, repayment mortgage on the average SVR could see their monthly payments go up by over £40 a month.

Three quarters of mortgage holders are protected by a fixed rate deal, so the rises will take a while to filter through. However, when their mortgage expires, they’re in for a nasty shock. According to the Telegraph, the current average two-year fixed rate deal is 3.25% – up 0.96 percentage points from November and the average five-year fixed rate mortgage is currently 3.37%, up 0.78 percentage points.

Read more: Is this the beginning of the end for rising house prices?

Not all mortgages are rising as quickly as the Bank of England base rate, because the big banks are still sitting on so much lockdown savings that they can afford to fund cheaper deals. So for the dedicated mortgage hunter, there are still some affordable mortgages around.

Even among those banks who are hiking rates, the threat of a recession lurking further down the line means rate expectations are lower when you look a few years down the track. It means banks are expecting rates to rise, then fall, so they’re offering plenty of cheap five-year mortgages. As a result, the gap between the rates on two-and five-year fixes has narrowed significantly, so it’s worth considering fixing for longer if you want to have more certainty over your outgoings in the years to come.

If you’re on a variable rate, you might want to fix sooner rather than later. With rates set to keep rising this year, the longer you leave it, the more you’ll pay. If you have a fixed rate mortgage with six months or less left on your current deal, you can apply for a remortgage rate today, and lock in a deal in case rates rise again. If you have longer until your fix comes to an end, there’s time to plan for how you’ll cover the extra costs.

Ideally, you’ll be able to track down costs to cut elsewhere in your budget, to free up more cash for your mortgage. You could even do that now and overpay on your mortgage, to limit the impact of future rate rises. If you’ve cut every cost possible, when the time comes you may be able to extend your mortgage, so your monthly payments are still manageable. However, this will mean paying more interest over a longer period, so it comes at a cost.

What it means for you: Savings

Bank of England interest rates impact on saving: Piggy Banks
Saving rates are now up, but as more rate rises are expected a short-term fix deposit would be better than locking money for long-term. Photo: Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters (Darrin Zammit Lupi / reuters)

Rising rates hold out the hope of good news for savers, but if you want to make the most of better savings rates, you need to choose your account carefully. Rates have risen across the board since December, but some parts of the market have done better than others. According to Moneyfacts, the average easy access savings account in November 2021 paid 0.19% and by May 2022 it had only risen to 0.39%. That’s up a disappointing 0.2 percentage points. Anyone who has their easy access savings with a high-street giant has faced an even more miserable rise from 0.01% to 0.1% or 0.2% – and in one notable case it hasn’t moved at all.

The big banks don’t have any incentive to raise these rates substantially. They attracted so much cash into easy access accounts during the pandemic that they don’t need to work hard to get hold of any more.

The smaller banks have worked far harder to push up rates, but to a certain extent they’ve been thwarted by the big banks. The high street giants haven’t passed all of the rate rises into mortgages, so the smaller banks have to keep their own mortgage rates low in order to compete. It means they haven’t been able to throw an enormous amount of cash at savers either. That’s why the best easy access savings account on the market is only 0.82 percentage points higher than the best in December.

Read more: What is the cost of living and how can you manage yours?

There’s a ray of hope in the savings market though, because some of the smaller banks are focusing their attention on providing the most competitive fixed rate accounts. This means the best one-and two-year fixed rates have risen faster than the Bank of England base rate. So once you have an emergency savings safety net of 3-6 months’ worth of essential expenses in an easy access account, you can consider tying some of your savings up for a year, and benefit from six months of rising rates.

If you’re thinking of tying your money up for a period in return for a higher interest rate, you might be tempted to sit tight given that rates are rising at the moment. However, today’s rise was already baked into the fixed rate market, so we’re unlikely to see dramatic movement. It’s also worth bearing in mind that we’re expecting more rate rises through the year, and if you don’t fix now there’s a risk you’ll never find the right time to do so: you’ll always be worried that rates will be higher later. One option is to fix for a relatively short period to take advantage of today’s rates, and then fix again for even more interest when that rate expires.

Watch: How does inflation affect interest rates?

What next?

There hasn’t been much good news since the May forecast. The Bank now expects inflation to be even higher, and peak at an incredible 11% in October, so the horrible squeeze on all our finances is here to stay. Much of this is down to another unspeakable rise in the energy price cap – which it now expects to be around 40%.

At the same time, another set of weaker GDP data means the Bank now expects growth to drop 0.3% between April and June – so we’ll see a shrinking economy far earlier than it expected in May – when the first falls were expected at the end of the year.

Read more: UK inflation heading for 14% for poorest households

It means we’re set to enter stagflation – where we get higher inflation alongside a shrinking economy, which means the bank has to tread an impossible balance between raising rates enough to keep a lid on inflation, without raising them fast enough to make economic woes even worse.

The majority of the committee voted for a 0.25pp rate rise, but a minority voted for 0.5pp, which is a strong indication that while there’s a delicate balance to be struck, this is highly unlikely to be the last of the rate rises. The market is now pricing in a rise to 2.9% at the end of the year and to 3.3% in 2023, and while this may be a bit punchy, it’s a strong indication of the direction of travel.”