MAJOR mortgage lenders including Halifax, Virgin Money and Skipton Building Society have pulled deals for new customers.
Halifax, the UK’s largest lender, has announced it is temporarily withdrawing all products that come with a fee “as a result of significant changes in the cost of funding”.

Lenders have responded to the market turmoil by pulling some deals
Meanwhile, Virgin Money and Skipton Building Society temporarily withdrew their mortgage ranges for new customers because of the volatility in sterling funding markets.
A growing list of lenders have pulled products following the Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s raft of tax cuts last week.
Much of this was unfunded and needs to re financed through issuing gilts. Changes to the gilt market impact swap rates, which lenders use to make pricing decisions.
Mortgage brokers say they haven’t seen anything like it since the credit crunch of 2008.
Sterling hit a record low against the dollar – the lowest since decimalisation in 1971.
The value of the pound fell by more than 4% to just $1.03 in early trading in Asia, before recovering to $1.09 this afternoon.
It promoted the Bank of England to say it “won’t hesitate to change interest rates”.
Halifax, the UK’s biggest lender for mortgages said it has temporarily withdrawn mortgage products that come with fees.
Interest rates are rising pushing up bills for homeowners and many scrambling to secure good rates
A spokesperson for Halifax, which is part of the Lloyds Banking Group, said: “As a result of significant changes in the cost of funding, we’re making some changes to our product range.”
“There is no change to product rates, and we continue to offer fee-free options for borrowers at all product terms and LTV levels, but we’ve temporarily removed products that come with a fee.”
Mortgage borrowers may see their monthly bills climb higher amid concerns that pressure is building for the Bank of England base rate to be hiked further in order to steady the pound.
A raft of tax cuts unveiled on Friday last week have prompted the fall and growing concerns for the impact on inflation.
The string of Bank of England base rate increases which have already taken place in recent months mean that a tracker mortgage is now about £210 per month more expensive, on average.
That’s compared to how much homeowers were paying before the rate increases started last December, rising from historic lows.
A standard variable rate (SVR) mortgage is now about £132 more expensive per month, according to the figures from UK Finance.
While the majority of mortgage holders are on fixed-rate deals, 1.8 million fixed deals are scheduled to end next year – meaning some homeowners could be in for a bill shock when they do eventually come to take out a new mortgage.
Borrowers are rushing to lock in fixed deals as early as possible to avoid future rate hikes.
The Bank of England increased rates by another half percentage point to 2.25% last Thursday.
The central bank’s comments today – a rare intervention outside of its regular six-week meetings – came before its scheduled next decision about interest rates in November.
It stopped short of making a surprise hike to interest rates today in response to the currency and market movements.
The Bank of England said that it will make a “full assessment” at the next scheduled meeting of the monetary policy committee, which is on November 3.
Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng has urged markets to “keep calm” and carry on as the value of the pound against the dollar tumbles to a record low.
He will map out his blueprint to reduce massive levels of borrowing with a “Medium Term Fiscal Plan” on November 23.