Tag Archives: house

Lending across all housing sectors in UK up in October, latest data shows

House purchase lending increased in the UK by 8% in October with all sectors, including first time buyers seeing a rise, according to the latest data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). A breakdown of the figures show that first time buyers borrowed £4.6 billion for house purchases, up 10% on September and October last year. This totalled 29,900 loans, up 8% month on month and 3% year on year. First time buyer lending grew for the second month in a row, to be the joint highest monthly lending level, alongside July 2015, by volume and by value since August 2007. Competitive mortgage rates mean first time buyers continue to pay low levels of their monthly household income to service the capital and interest rate payments of their mortgage at 18.4% in October. Home movers took out 35,400 loans, up 9% month on month and 3% compared to October 2014. In total, this was £7.1 billion borrowed, up 8% on September and 13% year on year. The October figure was only behind July this year for the highest amount borrowed since 2007. Home movers spent 18.2% of their monthly gross household income to pay capital and interest repayments, slightly more than last month but a decrease compared to September 2014. Home owner remortgage activity also increased, up 6% by volume and 10% by value compared to September. Compared to October 2014, remortgage lending was up 19% by volume and 34% by value. This is the most amount of remortgage loans in a month since January 2009, and the most amount borrowed for remortgage since June 2008. Gross buy to let saw month on month increases up 4% by volume and 3% by value, but more substantial growth year on year to the highest monthly gross buy to let lending level by value and by volume since the CML began tracking buy to let data on a monthly basis in January 2013. Buy to let remortgage is currently driving this with larger year on year growth compared to October 2014. ‘Home owner and buy to let activity have both continued the upward trend seen last month, and the market looks set to finish the year strong, despite taking time to gain momentum after a slow start to 2015,’ said Paul Smee, director general of the CML. ‘With increasing employment and the current absence of inflationary pressures in the UK, conditions for continuing demand in the housing market seem likely going into the new year. How supply will respond to this challenge going forward is a crucial question for 2016,’ he added. The data also shows that house purchase lending in the UK in October saw an increase by volume and by value of mortgages advanced compared to September and October last year. This was the second highest monthly house purchase levels, after July 2015, since 2007. As previously reported, UK gross lending overall in October totalled £21.9 billion, up 9%… Continue reading

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UK govt announces review to cut red tape for home builders

House builders in the UK are to have their say on red tape in the industry and how ineffective rules are hampering them from building more homes. The government has announced a Cutting Red Tape review which aims to uncover the issues that have the biggest effect on house builders and also wants to gather the views of smaller firms to understand the unique pressures they face. Ministers said that the wide ranging review will capture the experiences of all those involved in building homes, including developers, planners and trade associations. ‘This review will give house builders and smaller construction businesses a powerful voice as part of our £10 billion deregulation drive. Where rules are too complicated, ineffective or poorly enforced, I want to hear about it and the government will take action. Together we can cut red tape and get Britain building,’ said Business Secretary Sajid Javid. He pointed out that previously the Housing and Construction Red Tape Challenge delivered significant reforms and led to a review of local housing standards by the Department for Communities and Local Government. Housing Minister Brandon Lewis said he is determined to remove barriers faced by house builders to ensure more homes can be built to help reach the recently announced new targets for home building. ‘We want to hear the views of firms big and small so we can remove unnecessary red tape and help house builders do what they do best, building the homes we need,’ he added. He explained that the key starting points for the review are based on the priorities raised by the Task Force which include roads and infrastructure rules for new housing developments and environmental requirements, particularly European Union rules such as the Habitats Directive and wider EU environmental permit requirements. It will also look at rules that affect utilities such as electricity, gas and water as well as broadband infrastructure, and the government is also keen to look at the changes made to the Construction, Design and Management Regulations, as well as any examples of EU rules that are being implemented too strictly. John Allan, national chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, said that the government is right to listen to the needs of smaller businesses. ‘In the 1980s, smaller house builders delivered around two thirds of our new homes. Today, it is less than a third. If the government can encourage small firms back into house building, that would be a major step towards meeting this country’s housing needs,’ he explained. ‘The new Cutting Red Tape review will look at the way the law is enforced, as well as whether the rules themselves are proportionate and fit for purpose. The responses from house builders will lead to government taking concrete steps to remove burdens on business,’ he added. The announcement was also welcomed by Stewart Baseley, executive chairman of the Home Builders Federation. ‘As the industry looks to drive further increases in housing supply we welcome moves to reduce… Continue reading

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House prices up 0.1% in the UK in November, latest growth index shows

House prices across the UK increased by 0.1% in November but softened slightly year on year with annual growth of 3.7%, down from 3.9% in October. The latest data from lender the Nationwide shows it was the weakest performance in monthly price growth since June 2015. The latest increase takes the average house price to £196,807. But Nationwide chief economist Robert Gardner pointed out that growth rates have fluctuated throughout the year. Annual growth has been in a fairly narrow range between 3% and 4% over the past six months, which he said is broadly consistent with earnings growth over the longer term. ‘While this bodes well for a sustainable increase in housing market activity in the period ahead, much will depend on whether building activity can keep pace with increasing demand. Surveyors have continued to report a dearth of properties on the market in recent months, with the number of available homes reportedly at the lowest level since the late 1970s,’ said Gardner. ‘Therefore it is positive that policymakers are focusing on the need to increase home building, with the Chancellor announcing a range of measures aimed at boosting housing supply in his Autumn Statement,’ he explained. ‘The current rate of construction activity is well below the projected rate of household formation. Only 135,000 new homes were built in England in the 12 months to September 2015, well below the 220,000 new households that are projected to form each year over the next decade,’ he added. Neal Hudson, associate director at Savills research, described the figures as showing a relatively strong end to the year. ‘Previous trends suggest that prices tend to weaken in December and so the 4.1% total growth seen in the year to date may be closer to 4% by the end of the year. These price rises are in a large part due to increased competition in the mortgage market which have led to record low mortgage rates and record high lending multiples,’ he added. According to Alex Gosling, chief executive officer of online estate agents HouseSimple, the main issue in today’s market is that demand continues to massively outstripping supply. ‘We have an immediate supply crisis in the UK and it's hard to see how home builders can build houses fast enough to free up the demand supply bottleneck,’ he said. ‘We need measures to stimulate the housing market and it can't be just about building more homes to meet demand in the future. Sellers need to be encouraged back to the market. But home owners are finding it harder to climb up the property ladder, which means people are renovating and extending rather than moving,’ he pointed out. ‘High prices remain a barrier for first time buyers but also second and third steppers and price growth is unlikely to cool in the coming months, especially with more investors expected to come to the market to buy before the new buy to let stamp duty rates come into… Continue reading

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