Rate
tarts no longer welcomed by mortgage and credit card providers.
Released on
= July 27, 2005, 3:16 am
Press Release
Author = Richard Green
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = UK financial providers impose measures to reduce switching
activities by consumers.
Press Release
Body = Following on from recent moves in the credit card industry
(see “Rate tarts losing ability to cherry pick” http://cashzilla.blogspot.com/
) to reduce the number of people switching from one financial provider
to another, mortgage lenders are now looking to follow suit.
Abbey is the
latest High Street mortgage lender to notify its customers that
they are increasing the costs associated with switching from their
mortgage to £225, this fee is over and above any other penalties
levied for leaving early, and represents an increase of 25%. Abbey
is however only the most recent in a list of 53 mortgage providers
announcing similar steps within the last year.
Michael Coogan,
Director General of the Council of Mortgage Lenders, said, "All
lenders are having to look at their fees much more closely now".
The recent
financial reviews were attributed to the slowing of the housing
market whilst administration costs have continued to rise, however
David Hollingworth of mortgage brokers L&C agreed with the BBC
that lenders were imposing the charge to discourage
people from moving.
The Financial
Services Authority ( http://www.fsa.gov.uk/consumer/index.html )
advises caution when looking at the possibility of changing lenders.
“Switching can cut your monthly payments. But you’ll
need to weigh up these monthly savings or other benefits against
the up-front costs of making the switch.”
The growth in
the number of consumers switching their financial providers has
occurred due to the recent growth in the number of finance assessment
tables in newspapers, and financial comparison websites such as
Moneynet (
http://www.moneynet.co.uk ) which have been launched to help consumers
to get the best rates available.
The ease with
which consumers can compare the various rates and offers that are
available has meant that financial product providers have fought
to attract new financially mobile members from other providers,
through special offers and limited term deals. By making use of
these deals the financially mobile ‘Rate Tarts’ have
been able to wipe thousands of pounds off their mortgage repayments,
and some have even turned profits by regularly switching credit
cards.
The main strategy
that has been adopted by the credit card companies such as Egg,
Barclaycard, MBNA, Alliance & Leicester, Tesco and Mint, to
prevent rate tarts, is the introduction of about a 2% transfer fee
on all balances between cards. Card
holders will then usually benefit from an introductory period of
up to 9 months at a rate of 0% interest being charged over the deal
period.
Although the moves are designed to stop the actions of rate tarts
eating into lenders profits, many experts still say that while there
are more obstacles, and the
benefits of switching have been reduced compared to past levels,
borrowers can still save money by judiciously changing between lenders.
Savings Director for Chase de Vere, Sue Hannums, believes that,
"Even with these new charges, those with outstanding debts
on their credit card should still look to move to a cheaper deal.
If they can switch from one introductory offer to the next they
should make substantial savings over the long term."
Financial Director
Stuart Glendenning states that consumers are saving about £1
billion a year by taking advantage of interest-free periods; however
he suspects that, “Most banks are now working on a way to
discourage rate tarts. This will probably come in the form of more
widespread and more expensive transfer fees, particularly for longer
interest free offers."
Martin Lewis,
of moneysavingexpert.com, advises: "You must be vigilant and
be prepared to transfer again and again if you want to make the
savings. After a six-month interest free period, you only have to
pay interest charges at the standard rate for two months to lose
all of the benefits. And even if you forget to move from that card
just one day after the free period expires, you will pay an entire
month's worth of interest for that simple mistake." For mortgage
borrowers, the introduction of penalty fees does seem particularly
harsh, as David Hollingworth of mortgage brokers L&C points
out, "Most people's
gripe here is not that there is a fee, but more about the increasing
of that fee over the term of the mortgage, so when you are taking
a deal out it can be one figure, when you come to actually switch,
then you are looking at a very different figure." But the lenders
view it as more of an effort to recover fees directly from the customers
who are causing them additional costs, rather than including these
costs into their overall interest rates thereby making everyone
pay.
It seems that
the financial industries love affair with attracting customers from
competitors has finally ended. Whilst there are still many lenders
willing to
provide offers to attract customers, there are also many lenders
now looking to make rate tarts an endangered species.
Released by
http://www.bigmouthmedia.com
Web Site = http://www.moneynet.co.uk
Contact Details
= http://www.moneynet.co.uk
Moneynet
Sussex House
8-10 Homesdale Road
Bromley
Kent
BR2 9LZ
Telephone: 020 8313 9030
Fax: 020 8464 1971
E-mail: INFO@MONEYNET.CO.UK
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