Tag Archives: lending
Average UK house prices up 8.3% year on year, official index data shows
Average house prices in the UK increased by 8.3% in the year to July 2016, down from 9.7% in June 2016, continuing the strong growth seen since the end of 2013, according to the latest index data. The average UK house price was £217,000 in July 2016, some £17,000 higher than in July 2015 and […] The post Average UK house prices up 8.3% year on year, official index data shows appeared first on PropertyWire . Continue reading
Majority of home owners aged 55 and over in UK don’t want to downsize
Most people in the UK aged 55 and over have no intention of downsizing to a smaller property and it lack of suitable homes available that is putting them off, according to new research. Some 58% don’t want to move despite calls from the property and construction industry for more to be done to free up homes for first time buyers and second steppers, according to the research from My Home Move. For those that would consider downsizing a the lack of suitable properties and the costs involved in moving, including Stamp Duty, represent barriers to doing so. Some 46% of would-be downsizers want to move into a bungalow, while 20% are looking for a detached property while 52% want a property that is easier to manage and 21% want to release equity to help loved ones and enjoy life’s luxuries ‘The housing market has been suffering from a lack of stock for over 12 months, causing demand to outstrip supply time and time again. This has resulted in sky high house prices, instances of gazumping increasing and the Bank of Mum and Dad being called upon regularly to help first time buyers with their deposit,’ said Doug Crawford, chief executive officer of My Home Move. ‘Unfortunately, the findings from our survey suggest the situation is unlikely to ease; especially as 58% of those questioned have no intention of downsizing to release more top end properties onto the market anytime soon,’ he added. The survey also discovered that for the 25% who would like to downsize real and urgent barriers were stopping them from putting their homes on the market. Some 39% said there are not enough of the right kind of properties available to move into, 40% saw the costs involved in moving, including Stamp Duty Land Tax, as too prohibitive to consider moving now. ‘Despite the changes to Stamp Duty in 2014, the costs involved in moving can still tally into the thousands. This is especially true since the introduction of the 3% surcharge for additional properties. For those on a fixed income or heading towards retirement, it is not surprising that the financial reality is a stumbling block,’ Crawford explained. ‘We have seen stamp duty holidays for first time buyers in the past, so there is no reason the government couldn’t extend a similar scheme to downsizers, to help free up the market and get transactions moving,’ he pointed out. Continue reading
Buy to let lending via limited companies up in the UK in first half of 2016
Lending to buy to let investors borrowing via limited companies in the UK grew in the first half of the year according to the latest data to be published and the number of lenders and products available to limited company borrowers also increased. According to transactional data the number of buy to let mortgage applications completed by limited companies grew to 30% of all buy to let completions, up from 21% in the second half 2015, and 18% in the first half of 2015. By volume the number grew to 30% of all buy to let loans, up from 25% in the second half of 2015 and 20% in the first half of 2015, according to the buy to let data from Mortgages for Business. It also shows that the number of lenders offering products to limited company borrowers also increased in the first half of the year to 14 from 12 in the second half of 2015. The rise was due to existing buy to let lenders introducing limited company products rather than new lenders entering the buy to let sector. Lenders offering limited company products now account for 42% of the whole buy to let lending sector, up from 30% in the first half of 2016. Product numbers increased to an average of 154, up from 147 in the last six months of 2015, although the actual proportion of them as a percentage of the whole buy to let market fell due to the increase in product numbers available to individual borrowers. Whilst average products numbers for limited companies accounted for 13% of all buy to let products in the first half of 2016 but by the end of June the percentage had risen back to 16% of all buy to let products, the same percentage recorded in the first half of 2015. ‘Both applications and completions for limited company borrowers appear to have stabilised at around one third of all buy to let business,’ said David Whittaker, managing director of Mortgages for Business. ‘However this masks a dramatic change in the investment pattern for new purchases where the proportion investing through limited companies has risen from less than 20% by number or 25% by value in the first half of 2015 to over 50% in 2016, with second quarter applications by limited companies running at over 60% of total applications related to purchases of buy to let properties. This increasing proportion will also drive an increase in the proportion of completions in the next quarter,’ he explained. He pointed out that there has only been a slight uplift in the proportion of remortgaging activity that relates to limited company borrowers, due to historical investment patterns. ‘It would, however, appear that some landlords who already own property personally are sitting on their hands somewhat and holding back from remortgaging, probably waiting to see how the economy pans out post-referendum,’ he said. ‘With the Chancellor announcing his intentions to lower corporation… Continue reading