Its data revealed 85 per cent of first-time buyers chose a fixed-rate deal in January - the highest figure on record - and just over 70 per cent of home movers also decided on a fixed-rate product. It is encouraging that increasing numbers of first-time buyers are locking into the payment certainty a fixed-rate mortgage provides, as they are the group that are more financially stretched and may suffer most if interest rates go up. Overall, fixed-rate mortgages accounted for 72 per cent of all new loans in January - the highest proportion since January 2006 - up from 69 per cent in December.
The pricing of fixed-rate loans continued to remain attractive compared to variable-rate deals. The average interest rate of a fixed-rate loan in January was 5.27 per cent, up from 5.23 per cent in December, compared to the average interest rate of a discounted variable-rate product which reached 5.54 per cent up from 5.36 per cent in December.
Today's survey shows an 11 per cent seasonal fall in the number of loans for house purchase and remortgaging taken out in January - 162,300 loans, down from 182,300 in December. But, this was still 6 per cent higher than the 153,600 loans taken out in January 2006.
Michael Coogan, director-general at the CML, said: "Increasing numbers of people - especially first-time buyers - are opting for a fixed-rate mortgage. Each month it seems that the prospect of another interest rate rise is balanced on a knife edge. More and more borrowers are protecting themselves against this risk and choosing the certainty of fixing their monthly mortgage payments, which allows them to plan ahead with confidence."