NS&I back in favour and mortgage market hits seven-year low

Laura Suter
29 March 2023
  • Mortgage lending drops to seven-year low (bar during Covid)
  • Future mortgage approvals rose as rates dropped
  • Savers put almost £7 billion in fixed-rate accounts
  • NS&I saw bumper inflows of £2 billion – the highest since the pandemic

Laura Suter, head of personal finance at AJ Bell, comments on the Bank of England’s Money and Credit figures for February:

“Mortgage lending hit its lowest levels in seven years, if you disregard Covid times, as the housing market shows the first signs of an incoming slump. High mortgage rates, worries about house price falls and a crunch on affordability all lead to the lowest levels of lending since April 2016, again once you omit the anomalous Covid period.

“The outlook is slightly more optimistic though, with approvals for future lending increasing for the first time since August last year. Mortgage rates have dropped considerably since last year, meaning that some homebuyers who had delayed their homebuying plans have put them back on the table.

“Savers are continuing to vote with their feet and shift their money to better paying accounts. High-street banks have been criticised for not raising rates fast enough, but savers have got wise to this practice and are moving their money in droves. Fixed-rate accounts continued to be popular, as people lock in higher rates, with £6.8 billion of money deposited in these accounts. February was the fifth consecutive month where people moved their money out of easy-access accounts and into fixed-rate ones. As many signal that we’re nearing peak interest rates it’s a good time for savers to snap up higher rates now, before the market plateaus when the Bank of England ends its rate-hiking cycle.

“NS&I was also back in favour, after increasing interest rates to draw in more money. Savers handed over a whopping £2 billion to the government-backed provider in February, after it raised rates on many of its accounts and boosted the Premium Bond prize fund yet again. This is the highest inflows NS&I has seen since September 2020, when savers flocked to the market-leading accounts during the pandemic.

“It’s a sharp turnaround for NS&I, which has seen outflows in two of the past four months. The £2 billion of inflows seen in February amounts to more than the combined total for the past five months. As savers have got savvier, more have shifted their money away from the government-backed provider to get better rates elsewhere. If these inflows continue savers could face rates being slashed again, if the provider nears its target fundraising set by the government.”

Laura Suter
Director of Personal Finance

Laura Suter is director of personal finance at AJ Bell. She is a spokesperson for the company on a range of personal finance topics and is quoted in print media and regularly appears on TV and radio. She is also a founding ambassador of AJ Bell Money Matters, a campaign to get more women investing and engaging with their finances; she hosts two podcasts; and regularly speaks at events and webinars. Prior to joining AJ Bell she was a multi-award winning financial journalist, specialising in investments. Laura joined AJ Bell from the Daily Telegraph, where she was investment editor. She has previously worked for adviser publications in London and New York and has a degree in Journalism Studies from University of Sheffield.

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