Tag Archives: financial

January saw highest total approvals for home buying in UK for a year

The number of loan approvals for house purchase in the UK increased by 22% in January with the month seeing the highest number of total approvals since the beginning of 2014. The data from the Bank of England also shows that the number of remortgage approvals increased by 33% year on year. A breakdown of the data shows that purchase approvals reached 74,581 in January compared to the average of 70,221 over the previous six months while those for remortgaging was 42,228, compared to the average of 40,306 over the previous six months. According Peter Williams, executive director of the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association, the threat of a rate rise is no longer driving the remortgaging uplift and instead it is being supported by home owners looking to improve their financial situation through cheaper monthly repayments. ‘In particular, landlords are preparing for fewer tax reliefs like the loss of the wear and tear allowance and restriction of mortgage interest deductability. Accessing cheaper deals through remortgaging will help offset these when they come into place,’ he said. ‘With rising home owner equity and a range of competitive deals in the market, home owners have also been determined to capitalise on currently low rates and intense market competition amongst lenders,’ he explained. He also pointed out that the stability in lenders’ mortgage funding continues to improve. ‘While the government and the Bank of England have supported funding the market, an increase in retail deposits over mortgage balances is underpinning improved mortgage lending, with the savings inflow exceeding that lending by £215 billion or 17% in the last quarter of 2015,’ he added. Adrian Gill, director of Reeds Rains and Your Move estate agents, believes it signals a strong spring buying season ahead. ‘Interest rates aren’t going anywhere fast and while cheaper mortgage deals stick around, buyer demand is chomping at the bit. With all the various government initiatives now in place, many first time buyers consider this their best shot at making the finishing line and purchasing their own home and they are upping the ante to make sure they don’t miss out,’ he said. But in reality, he pointed out that the market currently favours sellers. ‘Those looking to put their home on the market haven’t been in such a strong position since before the recession. House price growth is gaining strength on both an annual and monthly basis, and with an army of eager first time buyers it’s a brilliant time for existing home owners to be advancing up the property ladder. Ultimately, activity levels won’t be able to keep up the pace unless there’s a steady stream of homes for sale entering the ring,’ he added. But Martin Stewart, managing director of the independent mortgage broker, said that the forthcoming referendum on the UK as a member of the European Union could slow the market. ‘The beginning of 2016 has been far busier than usual in the… Continue reading

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Private sector housing rent arrears up in UK

Cases of private rented sector tenants in the UK seriously behind on rent are rising once more, up 13.8% between the second and third quarters of 2015, new research shows. Those more than two months behind on rent now number 84,200, the most households since the second quarter of 2013, according to the latest Tenant Arrears tracker report from estate agency chains Your Move and Reeds Rains. In absolute terms this represents a quarterly increase of 10,200 additional households in potentially serious financial difficulties. On an annual basis, this means 13,200 more households are in significant arrears than a year ago, or an annual increase of 18.6% since the third quarter of 2014, when this figure previously stood at 71,000 across the UK. On a historical basis, the latest deterioration in serious tenant arrears remains relatively mild, remaining considerably below the record 116,600 such cases seen in the third quarter of 2012. However the latest figures for the third quarter of 2015 represent the highest levels in more than two years. The report points out that in part, the increase in absolute numbers of serious arrears due to the overall growth in the size of the UK private rented sector. As a proportion of all private tenancies, just 1.6% are in serious arrears of more than two months. This compares to a peak proportion of 2.9% of tenants in the first quarter of 2008. ‘The chance of an individual tenant falling into serious arrears remains very low. In general, renting works for most people. Over the last decade the private rented sector has expanded at an unprecedented pace, providing homes for millions of households at the same time as absorbing the worst financial crisis in living memory,’ said Adrian Gill, director of estate agents Your Move and Reeds Rains . ‘In the current climate, optimism feels increasingly reasonable. Most households are beginning to earn more, the cost of living is stable and the chance of falling into unemployment is diminishing. For the majority of tenants, paying the rent is becoming easier rather than harder,’ he pointed out. ‘But beneath this rising tide there are inevitably some households and individuals who are not yet feeling any new economic buoyancy. As others bid rents higher there will be a minority who are still struggling to keep up. Landlords and tenants have a mutual responsibility to be aware of this small but significant risk,’ he added. In quarter three of 2015 there were a total of 26,712 court orders for the eviction of tenants, on a seasonally adjusted basis. This is 4.3% lower than was seen in the second quarter when seasonally adjusted eviction orders stood at 27,909, and 7.8% fewer evictions than 28,959 a year before in the third quarter of 2014. Breaking 11 previous consecutive quarters of improvement, landlords’ own finances have remained in stable health between the second and third quarter of 2015. In the latest figures there are currently 5,700 cases of buy… Continue reading

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Stamp duty levels to continue to affect prime central London property market

The prime central London property market has seen a year of two halves but uncertainty over stamp duty levels is set to continue to affect the upper part of the sector in 2016, new research suggests. Just over a year the prime market was hit by increased stamp duty on properties worth more than £1.1 million and now this year extra duty of 3% is to be levied on buy to let investors and second home owners. The latest report from real estate firm Knight Frank explains that while the new measure is an attempt to address concerns surrounding affordability and house price inflation, it raises fresh questions over the dampening effect on tax revenues just as buyers and sellers in prime London were showing tentative signs of absorbing the previous increase. ‘Transactions and revenue have declined across London in the period following the December 2014 increase. It highlights concerns over the financially viability of the stamp duty reform, which had the welcome aim of increasing liquidity and affordability below £1 million but runs the risk of becoming a counterproductive deterrent above that level,’ said Tom Bill, head of London residential research. Meanwhile, the sub-£2 million market outperformed the rest of prime London in the second half of 2015, continuing a trend of recent years. In particular, properties worth less than £1 million have grown by more than any other price bracket. Bill explained that the highest growth has largely been outside the higher price brackets of prime areas of central London over the last 20 years. The Knight Frank analysis report highlights the markets where price growth was strongest during each year since the first quarter of 1995 and on a journey that began in Lambeth Walk and ends in Turnpike Lane, £50,000 would have become £1.18 million after stamp duty and moving fees are taken into account, representing a rise of 2,264%. The theoretical journey began in south London before moving further east to areas like Barking and Dagenham in the early 2000s as east London matured as a residential market. It then moved to prime central London in the run-up to and immediate aftermath of the financial crisis, including Marylebone, Belgravia and Fulham. Finally, as price growth pushed outwards from central London as the UK economic recovery consolidated after 2013 the strongest growth was found in the north London markets of Walthamstow and Turnpike Lane. Continue reading

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