Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Thomas Kingsley

Which lenders have removed their mortgages as hundreds more deals pulled

PA Archive

Hundreds of mortgage deals have vanished from the market in recent days after the mini-Budget triggered market mayhem.

Several lenders including Halifax, Virgin Money and Skipton Building Society have pulled their fixed-rate products for new customers.

Smaller lenders including the Scottish Building Society, Darlington Building Society, CHL Mortgages, Bank of Ireland, Clydesdale Bank, Paragon, Leek United Building Society and The Nottingham for Intermediaries have also taken the same action.

Analysis of the market by Moneyfacts.co.uk found that on Friday, the day of the mini-Budget, 3,961 residential mortgage products were available.

By Monday this week, the total had fallen to 3,880, and by Tuesday it had shrunk further to 3,596 deals - a reduction of 365 compared to Friday - analysis for the PA news agency found.

Rightmove's housing expert Tim Bannister said the decreasing deals were a “bitter pill” for people wanting to move home and those with ending fixed terms.

“We're monitoring activity carefully in real-time, and for now what we're seeing is that the housing market's very much still moving,” Mr Bannister said.

“The number of potential buyers requesting to view properties on Monday and Tuesday was down 3 per cent compared with other Mondays and Tuesdays this month, and demand is still significantly higher than the supply of homes for sale.

He added: “Also, the number of sales being agreed on Tuesday was at its highest number in a day since early August, perhaps as some people rush to get a mortgage before rates rise further.

“We've seen demand softening in the past few months, but buyer demand is still 20 per cent higher than the pre-pandemic five-year average, house prices are 15 per cent higher than they were two years ago, and the overall number of homes going through conveyancing is 40 per cent higher than in 2019.”

Brokers have said they expect lenders to return with new deals in the coming days.

As of Wednesday morning, there were 2,661 residential mortgage products available. In comparison, on Friday morning this figure totalled 3,961.

Today, this figure stands at 2,340 - according to research by money comparison experts, Moneyfacts.co.uk

Brokers believe products will return in the coming days (EPA)

The overall choice of mortgage deals remains significantly higher than it was during the depths of the coronavirus pandemic, which also caused significant economic uncertainty.

A particular low point was in October 2020, when 2,259 mortgage deals were available. During the pandemic, low-deposit mortgage deals, often used by first-time buyers, were particularly at risk of being pulled as lenders were concerned about “riskier” lending.

But this time around, the mortgage withdrawals appear to be more evenly spread across different loan-to-value (LTV) brackets.

Full list of lenders who have stopped mortgage products

Full product removal

Virgin Money

Skipton Building Society

Post Office Money

Vida Homeloans

Penrith Building Society

Hodge Bank

The Mortgage Lender

Atom Bank (digital mortgages)

Fixed-rate product withdrawals

Scottish Building Society

Monmouthshire Building Society

Marsden Building Society

Paragon Bank

Furness Building Society

Family Building Society

Bath Building Society

Melton Building Society

Teachers Building Society

Progressive Building Society

Cumberland Building Society

Kent Reliance

Precise Mortgages

Partial withdrawals and changes

Halifax - ending all products with a fee

Nationwide Building Society - increased fixed rate offers by 1.2 percentage points

Leeds Building Society - increased fixed rate offers by 1.25 percentage points

TSB - withdrawn its three and five years products and ended its five-year fixed house purchase with a £995 fee.

HSBC - Increased fixed rates by 1.86 percentage points

First Direct - Increased fixed rates by 1.66 percentage points

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.