UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause
Summary
Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause Bank of England likely to make two quarter-point increases amid sustained rise in inflation, investors believe Business live – latest updates ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Homeowners’ choice of mortgage deals has shrunk and interest rates on home loans are expected to rise this week despite financial markets reacting positively to Donald Trump’s pause on his threat to attack Iranian power plants. Early on Monday, as the end of a two-day deadline set by Trump for a deal with Iran grew closer, financial market data implied that investors believed the Bank of England would attempt to tackle rising prices with four quarter-point increases in rates before the end of December. After Trump instructed US defence officials to postpone airstrikes against Iranian energy infrastructure for five days , investors reduced the number of rate rises they expect to two quarter-point increases, from 3.75% to 4.25% this year. ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Read more However, in what will be a blow to mortgage payers, international investors continued to bet that the UK is vulnerable to a sustained rise in inflation after the US-Israel attack on Iran. He said: “Mortgage pricing does not wait for the Bank of England to come to [make up its mind]. “If markets keep pricing in higher rates from here, lenders are likely to continue repricing in advance.” Last week the Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, suggested the financial markets were getting ahead of themselves in expecting rate rises this year.
Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause Bank of England likely to make two quarter-point increases amid sustained rise in inflation, investors believe Business live – latest updates ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Homeowners’ choice of mortgage deals has shrunk and interest rates on home loans are expected to rise this week despite financial markets reacting positively to Donald Trump’s pause on his threat to attack Iranian power plants. Early on Monday, as the end of a two-day deadline set by Trump for a deal with Iran grew closer, financial market data implied that investors believed the Bank of England would attempt to tackle rising prices with four quarter-point increases in rates before the end of December. After Trump instructed US defence officials to postpone airstrikes against Iranian energy infrastructure for five days , investors reduced the number of rate rises they expect to two quarter-point increases, from 3.75% to 4.25% this year. ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Read more However, in what will be a blow to mortgage payers, international investors continued to bet that the UK is vulnerable to a sustained rise in inflation after the US-Israel attack on Iran. He said: “Mortgage pricing does not wait for the Bank of England to come to [make up its mind]. “If markets keep pricing in higher rates from here, lenders are likely to continue repricing in advance.” Last week the Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, suggested the financial markets were getting ahead of themselves in expecting rate rises this year.
## Article Content
The prospect of interest rate rises is having a ‘catastrophic impact’ on the home loans market, the comparison site Moneyfacts said.
Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
View image in fullscreen
The prospect of interest rate rises is having a ‘catastrophic impact’ on the home loans market, the comparison site Moneyfacts said.
Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause
Bank of England likely to make two quarter-point increases amid sustained rise in inflation, investors believe
Business live – latest updates
‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons
Homeowners’ choice of mortgage deals has shrunk and interest rates on home loans are expected to rise this week despite financial markets reacting positively to Donald Trump’s pause on his threat to attack Iranian power plants.
Early on Monday, as the end of a two-day deadline set by Trump for a deal with Iran grew closer, financial market data implied that investors believed the
Bank of England
would attempt to tackle rising prices with four quarter-point increases in rates before the end of December.
After Trump instructed US defence officials to postpone airstrikes against Iranian energy infrastructure
for five days
, investors reduced the number of rate rises they expect to two quarter-point increases, from 3.75% to 4.25% this year.
‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons
Read more
However, in what will be a blow to mortgage payers, international investors continued to bet that the UK is vulnerable to a sustained rise in inflation after the US-Israel attack on Iran.
Expectations that the Bank will raise rates several times this year has driven up the cost of fixed-rate mortgages and is having a “catastrophic impact” on the home loans market, the comparison site Moneyfacts said.
The average two-year fixed residential mortgage rate on Monday was 5.43%, up from 5.35% on Friday – the highest level since February 2025, and up from 4.83% at the start of March.
Hundreds of mortgage products have been pulled from the market. There are 6,144 residential mortgage products available, down from 6,659 on Friday.
Last week the Bank’s monetary policy committee
left rates on hold
but signalled it could be forced to increase borrowing costs in the coming months as the attacks on Iran threatened to drive inflation in the UK above 3%.
Nicholas Mendes, an adviser at the mortgage broker John Charcol, said products would continue to be pulled and there would be “further upward pressure on fixed mortgage rates as lenders try to keep pace with fast-moving markets”.
He said: “Mortgage pricing does not wait for the Bank of England to come to [make up its mind].
“If markets keep pricing in higher rates from here, lenders are likely to continue repricing in advance.”
Last week the Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, suggested the financial markets were getting ahead of themselves in expecting rate rises this year.
Some analysts cast doubt on the likelihood of four rate rises this year. Derek Halpenny, the head of research in global markets for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at MUFG, said the expectation of four rate rises was “overdone”.
Goldman Sachs said UK interest rate rises this year were unlikely. In a note to clients published on Friday, it said: “Our economists now think that the MPC will remain on hold for longer and maintain [the base rate] at 3.75% throughout 2026.”
Nevertheless, investors have rushed to buy safe haven assets, pushing the dollar to fresh highs this year.
Global
stock markets swung
on Monday and gold dropped, by 6% to $4,218 an ounce, down from almost $5,600 an ounce in late January.
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## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
- Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause Bank of England likely to make two quarter-point increases amid sustained rise in inflation, investors believe Business live – latest updates ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Homeowners’ choice of mortgage deals has shrunk and interest rates on home loans are expected to rise this week despite financial markets reacting positively to Donald Trump’s pause on his threat to attack Iranian power plants.
### Implications
- The prospect of interest rate rises is having a ‘catastrophic impact’ on the home loans market, the comparison site Moneyfacts said.
- Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images View image in fullscreen The prospect of interest rate rises is having a ‘catastrophic impact’ on the home loans market, the comparison site Moneyfacts said.
- Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images UK mortgage interest rates expected to rise despite Trump’s Iran pause Bank of England likely to make two quarter-point increases amid sustained rise in inflation, investors believe Business live – latest updates ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Homeowners’ choice of mortgage deals has shrunk and interest rates on home loans are expected to rise this week despite financial markets reacting positively to Donald Trump’s pause on his threat to attack Iranian power plants.
- After Trump instructed US defence officials to postpone airstrikes against Iranian energy infrastructure for five days , investors reduced the number of rate rises they expect to two quarter-point increases, from 3.75% to 4.25% this year. ‘Trumpflation’: how the Iran war’s economic storm could affect Britons Read more However, in what will be a blow to mortgage payers, international investors continued to bet that the UK is vulnerable to a sustained rise in inflation after the US-Israel attack on Iran.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers rate, mortgage, rates topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 633.
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