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LATEST: 'Rishi' effect kicks in as mortgage rates begin to reduce

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The '�Rishi effect' has started to impact mortgage rates just a day after the new PM was announced.

As former Chancellor Rishi Sunak moves into number 10, some lenders have announced plans to drop their rates from tomorrow; Coventry Building Society is reducing its new business five-year fixed 75% LTV rates and new buy-to-let five-year fixed 65% LTV standard BTL rates while Santander is cutting selected new business residential fixed rates by between 0.05% and 0.50% and all buy-to-let fixed rates by 0.05%

Accord Mortgages is also reducing rates across its new business residential product range, up to 0.35% for 75% and 85% LTV product rates, for 90% LTV product rates by up to 0.53% and for 95% LTV product rates by up to 0.52%.

Dan Lee

Daniel Lee (pictured), principal at Total Landlord Mortgages, says these are big reductions which could snowball.

'For the buy-to-let market, the biggest issue is the stress test, and The Mortgage Works has now just lowered this for new applications which is really good news and a positive sign,'� he tells LandlordZONE.

Market confidence

Lee says it's not the current 2.25% base rate which is the problem, but the banks setting rates of up to 7%. He adds: 'As long as there's confidence in the market, I believe they will lower interest rates. I'm sure we'll see the base rate raised next month '� and if it's less than 1%, this could be seen as a positive sign.'�

Lee believes that by March 2023, the investment landscape will look more positive. 'In the context of interest rates in the last 20 years, 3% is not that high. For landlords, it's still all about not panicking and holding tight.'�

Last month, lenders pulled hundreds of fixed buy-to-let mortgage products in response to the government's mini-budget. Many have reintroduced variable rates in the last few weeks.

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