The only advice I can give is when interest rates are so low you pay interest only and stick the main monies into a high interest rate bond or savings.
when interest rates go up fix it then switch back to capital repayment, then liquidate the savings bond and pay off the early payment accumulation.
That way you saved on interest plus you gained interest higher than just capital draw down.
Hope that makes sense for you chaps?
So just pay interest when low, then lock yourself into that rate when it looks like its all gonna go up and pay your mortgage as usual (interest+mortgage) for a couple of years then do it all over again?
Errr no the capital you are supposed to pay, you put to one side for reinvestment as the interest rates will be higher than interest only payment. That is the key here you can only do this type of restructuring
if you are disciplined as you essentially (save+better interest) what you would have to pay back anyways!
1) £100 capital repayment per year (simple) (£10 capital +interest £5) £100 got reinvested by mortgage company right! £15 per month total.
2) £100 capital, interest only £5 goes to mortgage company (£10 fixed yield bond one year) earn't £20 of interest over that 12month period. So sticking that (£10 per month into high interest product) come month 13 interest rates go up FIXED now.
Liquidated bond got £120 pounds back payback more than original £100.00 capital repayment. £5 per month £12 banked total payback to mortgage company £17 at term £2 pounds you would have lost to mortgage company!
This only works in times of low underlining rates of interest as we all fix when its about to rise high.
Some dicks will spend some of that capital saved and end up being worse off!Fundamentally as long as you make more than the current interest against your mortgage then you are always going to draw that mortgage down quicker once you pay off one lump at each term.
Things to watch out
Early payment fees: (Some mortgage companies charge you more money when you pay it off early because they loose the interest by shorting the payment terms)
Products that cost more than yield: (The investment is making less money than it cost to invest)
Products that tie you in over 12 months as you don't know when interest rates could suddenly rise?