Martin Lewis blasts banks for ‘outrageous’ delay in better saving rates as mortgage crisis grows
Savings rates should be put up at least with the same rate as borrowing, Martin Lewis told ITV’s Good Morning Britain
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Martin Lewis has said it seems “absolutely outrageous” that the rates savers are sitting on are lagging behind the rates being charged to mortgage borrowers.
Speaking on ITV’s Good Morning Britain about the impact of rate hikes on mortgage holders, he said: “None of this is accidental. The fact that mortgage borrowers are paying a lot more is the policy.”
Mr Lewis, who was speaking as ChancellorJeremy Hunt held a meeting with banks on Friday, told the programme: “Interest rates are put up to try and take money out of the economy, so you put borrowing rates up so that borrowers have less money, and you want savings rates to go up so that people save more and they don’t spend more. That’s the theory behind this.
“So the fact that mortgage borrowers are being squeezed is an absolutely deliberate thing.
“What that means is the chancellor is not going to call for help and more money to people who have mortgages. Because that would, if you’re following the theory, be counter-productive.”
On Thursday this week, the Bank of England hiked the base rate from 4.5 per cent to 5 per cent.
According to figures released by Moneyfactscompare.co.uk on Friday, the average two-year tracker mortgage rate on the market is 5.66 per cent, jumping from an average rate of 5.49 per cent on Thursday. The average two-year fixed residential mortgage rate is 6.19 per cent, which is unchanged from Thursday.
Mr Lewis, who spoke to Mr Hunt earlier this week, said he had suggested lenders should be stopped from increasing their profits on the back of interest rates going up.
He said: “They’re putting borrowing up, but they’re not putting savings up by the same amount.
“That seems absolutely outrageous to me, because when the banks were struggling in 2007/2008, we, the state, the taxpayer, bailed them out.
“We, the state, the taxpayer are struggling right now. They should be doing what they can in return, because they’re too big to fail and, now, they don’t want us to fail. They should be doing what they can in return.
“So to be increasing profits, increasing margins at this point seems absolutely wrong. It’s profiteering.”
“If I were the Chancellor, and what I said to the Chancellor obviously is, I think you need to make sure that they put savings rates up at least with the same rate as borrowing.
“Because if you do that, you take money out of the economy and that’s another way of helping inflation that’s less painful than putting lending up.”
Asked about a large number of people being on fixed-rate mortgages who will not feel the immediate impacts of the rates rising, Mr Lewis said: “That’s the real problem with increasing inflation when not many people are on variable rate mortgages. It’s a very blunt tool that disproportionately affects a few people.”
He said that, very roughly, a third of people rent, a third own outright and a third have mortgages.
He said of those who are hit by rate rises “because you’re trying to make them do all the work to take the money out, they’re being squeezed extremely tightly.
“It also means because people don’t come off fixes for a long time there’s a long time lag before interest rates going up have the full effect on consumers anyway.”
He added: “We should remember the indirect hit on renters, because renters are paying so much more than ever before and it is a very difficult situation to rent.”
Adding that he was not an economist, Mr Lewis said: “It’s a blunt tool, I don’t know how we’re expecting it to work that strongly, apart from the message sent to the markets which is a half a per cent rate rise, that was a slap across the face.”
Financial technology firm Twenty7tec said on Thursday that mortgage searches by advisers on the platform were 16 per cent higher than on an average Thursday and 7.8 per cent higher than the average previous interest rate decision days in the past two years.
Re-mortgage searches by advisers surged by 38.8 per cent compared with a typical Thursday and were 20 per cent higher than previous interest rate decision days in the past two years.