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Mortgage market bounces back from Truss madness

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

Liz Truss complains that a cabal of stuck-in-the-mud economists did for her plans to reform the UK’s finances before they ever had a chance to get going.

The more obvious view is that markets looked at what she had to offer and took fright because they were dangerous. They certainly calmed down once she was gone.

What has happened since? Well, in the mortgage market the picture could hardly be moving more rapidly in our favour.

The Bank of England is still putting interest rates up. But mortgage deals are already getting cheaper on the expectation that the longer term tend is downwards.

One expert says there is a “mortgage price war” that is giving brokers nervous breakdowns. Steven Morris at Advantage Financial Solutions says: “Every time we apply for a fixed rate for a customer, within no time it’s cheaper elsewhere. I am currently on application number six for the same client in a bid to get them the best deal, which must be a personal record since I started advising back in 2008.”

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There was a very scary looking period when it seemed that anyone coming to the end of a fixed rate mortgage deal was facing seriously expensive new monthly payments just to stay in their house.

This already looks like it will be manageable, that competitive banks operating in a fluid market for finance will once again fight for our custom.

Brokers say they expect mortgage rates to keep falling, so our biggest problem will be locking in to a deal too soon and missing out on a cheaper one later.

This doesn’t sound like a staid economic establishment bent on undermining ideas it doesn’t like. It sounds like a competitive market that works just fine as long as the people at the top at sensible.