British households with fixed-term mortgage deals will feel the impact of higher interest rates when their current deals expire by the end of next year, a Barclay’s chief has warned.
Barclay’s CEO CS Venkatakrishnan told the Wall Street Journal CEO Council that a higher portion of households’ earnings will be spent on mortgage payments, leading to a “huge income shock.”
“By our assumptions, for the median family income with the median mortgage, what they have paid as their mortgage or rental payments in the last two decades—the ’90s to 2020—was about 20 percent of their income. That is going to be about 28 percent to 30 percent of their income. So there is a huge income shock,” Venkatakrishnan said.
With mortgage rates increasing, homeowners are set to feel the pinch when brokering new deals. Some lenders, including Santander, Halifax, and Kensington Mortgages have already increased mortgage rates this week by up to 0.2 percentage points.
As people start to spend more on mortgages, their consumption will be affected. This comes in addition to other factors, Venkatakrishnan said, such as the effect of inflation on food, energy, and basic goods and services.
Markets have already registered a slowdown in consumption for households across Britain, the Barclay’s boss said.
“They [our customers] are paying down high debt on credit cards—our credit card balances have dropped by about 40 percent, pre-pandemic to now. Spending is basically falling short of inflation, so people are spending on an annualised rate of … about 5 percent, when inflation is running at 9 percent or 10 percent,” he added.
What consumers experience now is credit distress, Venkatakrishnan suggested, adding it cannot been seen yet, “except at the very fringes.”
The Bank of England’s (BoE’s) current bank rate, or the single most important interest rate in the UK, is at 4.5 percent. Given the current high inflation rate of 8.7 percent, which stands in contrast to the government target of 2 percent, the BoE may be pressured to raise the interest rate in June.
Market Volatility
Mortgage rates soared last year in the wake of the 2022 mini-budget under the former Conservative leadership. Former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng had proposed to cut income taxes without a clear plan to pay for the cuts, which in turn triggered market volatility.At the time, major lenders including NatWest, Barclays, Halifax, and Virgin Money all pulled deals to increase their prices.
The new Tory government led by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has pledged to limit mortgage rates.
“I think inflation is the number one enemy, as Margaret Thatcher rightly said. Inflation has the biggest impact on those with the lowest incomes. I want to get a grip of inflation,” he added.