Hampshire Trust cuts buy-to-let rates by up to 0.60%
The Bank has also simplified loan bandings between £100,000 and £5m and bespoke products over £5m.

Hampshire Trust Bank has reduced rates across its specialist five-year fixed rate buy-to-let mortgage range.
Products have been reduced by up to 60 basis points with rates starting at 6.69% for Fee Plus, 7.09% for ERC Plus and 7.29% for ERC Lite.
HTB will continue to offer bespoke pricing for loans over £5 million in acknowledgement of larger deals often being more complex and requiring flexibility across both pricing and criteria.
Fee Plus comes with a 5% arrangement fee and no lifetime ERC; ERC Plus also comes with a standard 2% arrangement fee and a 1% lifetime ERC; and ERC Lite comes with a standard 2% arrangement fee and no lifetime ERC.
In addition, the Bank has simplified its loan bandings for buy-to-let, with these rates available on all loans between £100,000 and £5 million. Previously the loan bandings were split between £100,000-£1m and £1m-£5m.
Chris Daly, managing director of specialist mortgages at Hampshire Trust Bank, commented: “At HTB, we constantly review our pricing and so today have taken the immediate decision to reduce rates in order to help brokers and their landlord clients further.
“These significant rate cuts of 60 basis points across our ERC Lite, ERC Plus and Fee Plus five-year fixed-rate products, coupled with our expansive criteria and market-leading service levels, will provide advisers with an enhanced, competitive range of options for their landlord clients.”

Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
Lloyds
Lloyds sets aside extra £4bn for high-LTI mortgage lending

FCA
FCA confirms simplified mortgage rules

Bank Of England
Bank of England issues first-of-its-kind fine of £11.9m

Government
Government publishes legislation to bring pensions into inheritance tax

Government
Government confirms launch of permanent Freedom to Buy mortgage scheme

Regulation
Lenders urged to prepare for court ruling on commissions as motor finance complaints surge
