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Opinion: With mortgage rates and the economy it’s better to plan and calculate than take a risk

"Many of the inflationary pressures are temporary and have a cause, which can be remedied with the right appetite"

For sale, under offer and sold signs, West Hampstead, London(Image: Tim Graham/Getty Images)

Rates are rising for sure, and with the Bank of England’s announcement that the base rate will now rise by 0.5 percentage points to 2.25%, the highest level since 2008, homeowners and investors alike will really be counting the pennies.

Last week I was interestingly asked about an onward index swap (OIS) curve and what that meant for interest rates! Whoop.

As you can see, it’s a very specific and clever question, but what does that actually mean, and is it relevant in determining rates/inflation and in turn the value of your home? Remember, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s is a debt-driven economy, and the comfort of having equity (a gap between your home’s value and debt/mortgage) is the big confidence driver for the economy. In reality it should mean nothing other than: “You have X amount of debt”.

The OIS is a ‘forecast’ of where interest rates may be at some point in the future so, looking at that curve for the coming years, it’s clearly downward. The graph is hefty in its spike upwards now, topping at around 4.5% but nosediving over the coming years and levelling out in five to six years’ time at around 2.8%.

Do I give this much credence? Hardly. It’s like predicting the weather in two years by sticking a wet finger out of your car window now. For example, the same (one month-old) predictive curve on the date of the August 22 monetary policy committee meeting showed rates peaking at close to the new low of 2.8%, and falling to a low of 1.8%. That’s quite a gap within a month (see note above re. wet finger).

I stand by the assertion that many of the inflationary pressures are temporary and have a cause, which can be remedied with the right appetite and approach. This does not help a homeowner or borrower, however. This effectively becomes a gamble, and the odds are the loss of a house and security or, at best, having to sell it down in a market where the buyer is the winner. History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning

It’s better to plan and calculate than take a risk so, as I stated over the past two years, grabbing a slightly longer fixed rate would have been a good move so you know what you are budgeting for.

The Financial Conduct Authority states it expects base rates to average at 3%, ranging from 2.5% to 4%, and that cost will naturally be passed on in the payment rate for consumers. Personally, I see the base rate peaking closer to 4.5%. When the Bank rate was at 0.1% the larger lenders had a standard variable rate (SVR) of around 3.59%, so around 3.49% higher. With the base rate rising to 1.75%, the SVRs are around 5.24% – amazingly, 3.49% higher. Do your numbers on a base rate of 4.5%!