MPowered Mortgages cuts two-year fixed rates by 0.30%
The latest reductions follow cuts to its three-year fixed rates last week.
"Swap rates have continued to rise in the last week, especially in the five and 10-year space as the Chancellor's Autumn Budget draws near and financial markets are nervous. "
- Stuart Cheetham, CEO of MPowered Mortgages
MPowered Mortgages has reduced its two-year fixed rate mortgage products by up to 30 basis points.
Last Thursday, the lender cut its three-year rates by an equal amount, with rates starting from 3.93%.
Two-year rates for new purchase customers now start from 4.11% at 60% LTV with a fee of £999. Two-year rates for remortgage customers start from 4.29% at 60% LTV with a £999 fee.
Stuart Cheetham, CEO of MPowered Mortgages, said: "Swap rates have continued to rise in the last week, especially in the five and 10-year space as the Chancellor's Autumn Budget draws near and financial markets are nervous.
"Despite this, we are still reducing our two-year rates today following on from our three-year fixed rate reductions last week. We urge borrowers to seek independent financial advice before making any decisions when it comes to their mortgage especially during this time of mortgage rate volatility."
Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
Inflation
Interest rates could rise as Bank of England responds to oil shock
First-time Buyer
Just one profession pays enough for buyers to afford average UK home
FCA
APPG urges overhaul of 'systemically flawed' UK financial conduct regulation
Interest Rates
Bank of England forecast to hold interest rates 'well into 2027' as inflation tops 4%
This week's biggest stories:
Inflation
Interest rates could rise as Bank of England responds to oil shock
First-time Buyer
Just one profession pays enough for buyers to afford average UK home
FCA
APPG urges overhaul of 'systemically flawed' UK financial conduct regulation
Interest Rates
Bank of England forecast to hold interest rates 'well into 2027' as inflation tops 4%
Bank Of England
Bank of England holds interest rates as inflation risks persist
FCA
FCA confirms new incident reporting and third party rules