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Get ready for mortgages from Tesco!

You'll soon be able to get mortgages as well as mushrooms and macaroons from the supermarket giant.

Regular readers will know that a certain supermarket giant is very dear to my heart. Given that I live in the town where Tesco has its headquarters, it might just be something in the water, but I do seem to spend an awful lot of time – and more to the point, money – in the nation’s largest supermarket.

The store has even seeped into my wallet, given that all of my spending goes on the marvellous Tesco Clubcard credit card, which gives your Clubcard collection a nice boost with every pound you spend, no matter where you spend it, but also currently offers a market-leading 13 months of 0% interest on purchases.

However, I may soon have to consider the store for far more than my groceries and credit cards, as Tesco is making a move into mortgages.

The Tesco banking arm

Tesco has been fairly open for some time about its banking ambitions, and last week saw the announcement that it hoped to make the move into mortgages in the first half of 2011, followed by current accounts in the second half of 2011/12.

The supermarket had hoped to start offering mortgages before the end of this year, but has been delayed due to the extra red tape in place following the collapse of lenders during the credit crunch.

However, should things go to plan, from the middle of next year we’ll have one more high-profile lender to consider when sorting out our home finance.

A good track record

When it comes to branching out into the world of finance, Tesco has a bit of pedigree. I’ve already highlighted its market-leading credit card, but the supermarket has its fingers in a few other financial pies.

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For example, if you’re after a personal loan Tesco offers a typical APR of 7.7% (or 7.6% for existing customers), a smidgen above the market-leading deals for new customers from Santander and Alliance & Leicester at 7.6%.

Tesco also offers a decent if unspectacular easy access savings account, paying 2.60% AER, and which you can open for as little as £1, while its insurance products are pretty decent too.

Tesco already has a decent track record when it comes to financial products, a good sign ahead of the big mortgage launch, right?

A question of distribution

So why am I concerned about Tesco’s entry into the mortgage market?

It all comes down to independent advice for me. It’s one thing to sign up for an average savings account, or even a credit card, on a whim while at the supermarket, but a mortgage is a different thing entirely. After all, signing up for a mortgage is pretty much the biggest financial commitment you’ll ever make.

Of course, I’m not daft enough to think that some shoppers will just pick up a quick two-year fixed rate while stood at the checkout, but I am concerned about just how these mortgages will be distributed.

The importance of advice

One of the most unfortunate by-products of the credit crunch was that lenders increasingly turned their back on independent advisers, and offered many products (often their most attractive rates) on a direct-only basis.

John Fitzsimons explains why the best mortgages offer you a bit of flexibility

In my view, this is a disaster. Sure, some borrowers are comfortable sorting out a mortgage themselves, but there is a reason that up until the crunch truly hit 70% of all mortgage applications went through brokers. Independent advice is hugely important when it comes to mortgages; many of us need someone to help us work out which type of mortgage is best for our own attitude to risk and financial situation.

Brokers are also great at working out just how well you fit a lender’s criteria, and can work out for you just how likely you are to be accepted. This is a crucial point – we can all find a mortgage that looks good, but if you don’t qualify for it, and are then turned down, it can wreak havoc on your applications to other lenders.

And it’s not like the advice needs to cost a fortune – you can get mortgage advice absolutely fee-free from certain advisers, including lovemoney.com’s own mortgage team.

Keeping loyal

But I can’t help fearing that brokers will be cut out once Tesco makes the leap into mortgages.

We’ve already seen one national institution, the Post Office, move into mortgages yet refuse to deal with advisers, relying instead on the trust attached to the brand name. Given that the Post Office offers some of the most attractive looking rates at high loan-to-value, making them appear a great option for first-time buyers, it leaves me a little uneasy that some inexperienced borrowers may be trying to completely go it alone without really understanding what they are doing.

Recent question on this topic

I fully expect Tesco to do the same, particularly since a spokesperson for the supermarket has gone on the record as saying that Tesco’s mortgage offering will look to reward customer loyalty.

Would it really be so surprising to see 0.2% discounts on mortgages if you already have a Clubcard?

A positive for the market

Of course, I could be completely wrong, and Tesco will embrace the opportunities afforded by dealing with mortgage advisers.

The simple fact is that the mortgage market is not in a great state at the moment. As I wrote in Worst mortgage conditions for a decade, August saw the worst mortgage lending figures for that month since 2000. There just aren’t enough lenders actively looking for business, and Tesco has the size and brand recognition to really shake things up and bring some innovation to the market.

Tesco can be a real force for good for borrowers as the mortgage market enters yet another difficult period, but it could also put some borrowers in a difficult position if they don’t work alongside independent advisers. It will be interesting to see just what Tesco Mortgages looks like when it launches next year.

More: Five great ways to slash your mortgage costs! | Don't pay a penny for your mortgage

At lovemoney.com, you can research all the best deals yourself using our online mortgage service, or speak directly to a whole-of-market, fee-free lovemoney.com broker. Call 0800 804 8045 or email mortgages@lovemoney.com for more help.

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  • 20 October 2010

    *Tesco monopoly* sums it up!!! They should not be allowed to go into the morgage market. Their financial products may lok good on the surface but delve a bit deeper and they aren't as good. I've opened a savings account on 29th July and haven't been able to use it!! I ordered the card reader that is needed to service the account within a few days of the account going live and it has taken them till last week to send it!! I've stopped using their petrol too. Can recommend their Christmas Saver though...not the stamp card though Stick to selling beans Mr.Tesco!!

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  • 18 October 2010

    Tesco supermarket, Tesco insurance, Tesco mobile............whats next Tesco mortgages, Tesco trains, Tesco airline, etc. You can see where there going?! Market growth and monopoly!

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  • 17 October 2010

    I hope they don't go the same way with mortgages as they have with credit cards, and I see the author has taken to using the word 'typical', when the rate tesco will charge you will almost certainlt be musch more than 'typical'. When they say typical they mean 'minimum'. and probably not what you'll be offered. - I challeneg anyone who has had their card for more than three years to tells us they are still on 'typical' rates, and is anyone at all on les than 'typical'??? They just did a 'review' on my credit card, adn wanted to increase my APR to somethin like 26%. *'Typical rates for brand new borrowsers 18.9% absolute max 19.9%. Apparently my ten year record of on late payment and three over limits wasn't mentioned in my new exceedingly high risk. Np the reason I was such as high risk was that I used the credit limit they gave me without asking, and set up a direct debit to pay the minimum each month. - So proving over ten years that I could service the debt made me so high a risk, that they wanted over 25% (which is NOT 7% above 'typical' it is about 30% more than typical). - And tehy refused to let ma set up a schem whihc padi back the minimum or £xxx whicehver was the most. Too difficult for their multi million pound computer, So I paid it all off, and am not using my card again until, using their own logic, I have a track recod of borrowing nothing and paying it all back every month, which brings me back down to 'typical' again.  Ni, I for one will NOT be taking out a mortgagewith them, after the credit card fiasco, and their insults to my intelligenc over the home phone 60% price increase advertised as a cost cut, I find them just as trustworthy as all the other banks.

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