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Mortgage payments for UK first time buyers have fallen sharply

First time buyers in the UK with small deposits are making savings of more than £790 a year, when comparing monthly mortgage payments to the same time last year, new research suggests. This is in part due to competitive interest rates now available as monthly mortgage costs for first time buyers have fallen sharply, according to the latest Genworth Moneyfacts LTV tracker report. The average house price for a first time buyer is £154,559 and for those with a 10% deposit, lower mortgage interest rates mean they can save £67 a month compared to what they would have paid if they’d taken out the same loan a year ago. This adds up to savings of £800 over the course of a year. For those with 5% deposits, the monthly payment on a 95% LTV mortgage for an average first time buyer home was £66 per month lower in March 2016 compared to 2015, equating to annual savings of £792. The report explains that part of the reason for the attractive rates is increased competition as the number of mortgage products at high LTVs has risen in recent months. The number of mortgages available for those with a 5% deposit jumped sharply from 195 in March 2015 to 267 in March 2016. As a result, rates for 95% LTV mortgages reached a record low of 3.92% in March 2016, 0.80 bps lower than a year before. Rates for 90% LTV loans are also much cheaper, having fallen 0.92 bps to 2.82%. However, the total amount of high LTV lending has stagnated even while overall lending has increased revealing that while lenders may be competing for the best customers in the high LTV bracket, they are more focused on increasing lending to customers with larger deposits. Despite a climate which is ripe for high LTV lending and a rising numbers of available mortgages, lending to those with a 5% deposit, which saw a notable boost following the introduction of the Help to Buy Mortgage Guarantee (HTB2) Scheme, has subsequently flat lined. Lending to those with 5% deposits received a much needed boost following the introduction of HTB2, with the proportion of lending at this level climbing from 1.7% in the fourth quarter of 2013 to 3.1% in the first quarter of 2014. It reached a high of 4.2% of total mortgage lending in the second quarter of 2014 but stagnated at around 3% in 2015. The stagnation in lending to those with small deposits is particularly concerning given that the Help to Buy Mortgage Guarantee scheme is due to end after this year. With nothing scheduled to replace the scheme, the fear is that lending to this part of the market could continue to fall. ‘Competitive rates available for those with just 5% or 10% deposits mean they are able… Continue reading

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Chancellor warns property prices will take a big hit if UK leaves EU

Leaving the European Union would hit the UK residential property market with prices likely to be hit significantly and make mortgages more expensive, according to the Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne. Speaking on national television, he warned that if there is a Brexit, the term used to describe the country leaving the EU, then the values of homes will fall. He also revealed that the Treasury is about to publish a major piece of research on how Brexit would affect that UK economy and that one major issue that emerges is the effect on real estate, ‘You will see the analysis we will do, but I’m pretty clear that there will be a significant hit to the value of people’s homes and to the costs of mortgages. That is one example of the kind of impact, economic impact, that we get from leaving the EU,’ he said on of ITV’s Peston on Sunday politics programme. He has spoken out as the campaigning ahead of the EU referendum on 23 June hots up. The polls have been neck and neck but at the beginning of May an ICM poll put the leave camp slightly ahead at 45% compared to 44% for remain. The warning from Osborne comes as prices have started to ease slightly. The latest Halifax index, just published, shows prices fell by 0.8% in April. The market has been looking healthy recently with data from HMRC showing that sales have risen dramatically from 116,930 in February to 165,480 in March, the highest monthly total since records began in April 2005. While sales in the first three months of 2016 were 32% higher than in the same period last year, much of both the monthly and annual increases is likely to be attributable to a rush to beat the new stamp duty tax rates for buy to let and second homes in April. On top of this the volume of mortgage approvals for house purchases, a leading indicator of completed house sales fell by 2.5% between February and March. This suggests that the number of new buyers seeking to complete ahead of the stamp-duty surcharge had already begun to ease. Approvals, however, were still 15% higher than in March 2015, according to Bank of England, seasonally adjusted figures. Meanwhile, supply remains historically low. New instructions by home sellers fell marginally in March following three consecutive monthly increases. Market conditions remain very tight with stock levels nearly 20% lower than a year ago, at a near historical low, the most up to date monthly report from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) shows. Continue reading

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Housing market activity in the UK striding forward, latest research suggests

A surge in remortgaging has driven the UK housing market to make great strides forward on a long term basis, according to new research. This has mitigated the historic steadying that occurs in the month of April and the total number of valuations carried out increased 24% year on year, the figures from Connells Survey & Valuation show. The firm points out that this counteracts the 22% short term downturn that occurred in the market as a whole between March and April. Every year since 2013, April has seen a decline in valuation volumes on a monthly basis. For example, between March and April 2015, overall valuation activity declined by 32%, some 10% greater than the fall experienced over the same period in 2016. According to John Bagshaw, the firm’s corporate services director the property market is experiencing some vibrant long term growth regardless of any short term indicators. ‘The monthly downturn the valuation sector has experienced overall is a reflection of an historic trend which sees housing activity typically sink somewhat after a New Year surge,’ he said. ‘However, this year’s dip has not been as protracted as that of previous years’, a sign the property market is becoming robust enough to endure these cyclical market forces. The longer term picture is even more positive. As house prices continue to rise and interest rates remain at record lows, ever more people will be drawn to the property ladder,’ he added. The monthly report also shows that activity in the remortgaging and first time buyer sectors has been the key driver of annual growth in April’s valuation market. The remortgaging sector saw the strongest annual uplift of 50% between April 2015 and April 2016, while valuations carried out for first time buyers grew by 46% on a yearly basis. However, remortgaging valuation volumes in April also contracted by a quarter on a monthly basis. Similarly, valuations carried out for first time buyers fell by 15% month on month. But Bagshaw pointed out that while the remortgage and first time buyer sectors have still been somewhat affected by the seasonal slowdown, this has been more than counterbalanced by their performances over a 12 months basis. ‘Remortgagors continue to take courage from the rock bottom interest rate, a rate which has spurred many home owners to either switch mortgages for a cheaper rate or release the capital on their home,’ he said. ‘Equally, the political and economic momentum seems to be firmly with first time buyers. They are currently basking in a range of government assistance packages, including a recently extended Help to Buy scheme, as well as enjoying a confident lending market as evidenced by new Barclays 0% deposit mortgage,’ he explained. ‘The sum total of these schemes has transformed a once cautious sector into one of the most vibrant in the property market and there are few signs of that changing… Continue reading

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