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Save to Buy Vs Help to Buy
Salander
Posts: 45 Forumite
Hello all,
the big benefit of Nationwide's Save to Buy account is the prospect of a 5% mortgage at the end of it. Does then the new Help to Buy scheme mean its end?
I guess it will mean that loans are less risky and so the rates will go down across the board?
Why would nationwide want to lend via the Save to Buy scheme when it could lend at 5% with a government guarantee backing it up as well- this must be a better deal for them (and the customer eventually?)
Thoughts...
the big benefit of Nationwide's Save to Buy account is the prospect of a 5% mortgage at the end of it. Does then the new Help to Buy scheme mean its end?
I guess it will mean that loans are less risky and so the rates will go down across the board?
Why would nationwide want to lend via the Save to Buy scheme when it could lend at 5% with a government guarantee backing it up as well- this must be a better deal for them (and the customer eventually?)
Thoughts...
0
Comments
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NO STB and the other 16 lenders offering 95% products will continue to do so. You'll have the HTB - MG products to choose from too.
Compare the rates, fees etc and see which suits you best.
The lender (and you, indirectly) will pay for the Government guarantee, so they will not necessarily replace existing 95% facilities.I am a mortgage broker. You should note that this site doesn't check my status as a Mortgage Adviser, so you need to take my word for it. This signature is here as I follow MSE's Mortgage Adviser Code of Conduct. Any posts on here are for information and discussion purposes only and shouldn't be seen as financial advice. Please do not send PMs asking for one-to-one-advice, or representation.0 -
some of the smaller lenders who do not sign up for these schemes will still have some competitive localised discounts
as they do now
my personal observation only, I am not an expert in mortgages or anything else for that matter0 -
HTB guide - the differences;-
http://yournews-legalandgeneral.com/pv_obj_cache/pv_obj_id_BB320F8298FC1120B8826B44DE0AD12E294C0800/filename/Help%20to%20Buy%20Definition%20Budget%202013.pdfI am a mortgage broker. You should note that this site doesn't check my status as a Mortgage Adviser, so you need to take my word for it. This signature is here as I follow MSE's Mortgage Adviser Code of Conduct. Any posts on here are for information and discussion purposes only and shouldn't be seen as financial advice. Please do not send PMs asking for one-to-one-advice, or representation.0 -
Why would nationwide want to lend via the Save to Buy scheme when it could lend at 5% with a government guarantee backing it up as well- this must be a better deal for them (and the customer eventually?)
Thoughts...
You are overlooking an important fact. The NW still needs to raise the funding in order to advance mortgages. So Save to Buy is dual purpose. It provides NW with retail deposits from savers to lend. Unlike the major banks, Building Societies are far more limited in their ability to raise funding other than from retail savers. More so since the great financial crash.0
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