Tag Archives: lending
Mortgage lending in UK boosted by buy to let frenzy due to stamp duty change
Gross mortgage lending reached £25.7 billion in the UK in March, a rise of 43% compared with the previous month and up 59% year on year. The surge in lending was driven by a dash by buyers to beat the 3% property stamp duty surcharge on additional homes that was introduced on the 01 April, according to the latest report from the Council of Mortgage Lenders. The data also shows that lending was the highest March figure since 2007 when gross lending reached £30.9 billion. Gross mortgage lending for the first quarter of this year was therefore an estimated £62.1 billion. This is the same level as in the previous quarter, but 39% higher than the first three months of 2015. ‘Against a backdrop of a recovering market, the substantial jump in lending in March was significantly influenced by a late surge of activity to beat the government’s stamp duty change on second properties, which came into effect at the start of April,’ said CML economist Mohammad Jamei. ‘The distortion caused by this stamp duty change appears to be larger than any previous stamp duty change we’ve seen. As a result, we expect there will be about 10,000 fewer mortgaged transactions each month in the second quarter of 2016 than would otherwise have been the case, offsetting the increase in activity seen in March,’ he added. According to Peter Williams, executive director of the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA), although the initial buy to let lending rush has passed, repercussions will continue to ricochet through the market. ‘Other efforts to manage demand among landlords, like reductions to mortgage tax relief, will impact on those looking to expand their portfolios. At IMLA we expect the tax increases to spur more remortgaging as landlords look at other ways to keep costs down,’ he said. ‘However, importantly, the changes will mean the sector then shrinks, the private rental sector will continue to grow perhaps more slowly to meet the demand of a rising population, continued affordability problems and the dearth of new housing supply,’ he pointed out. ‘While the failure to constrain price rises and to build more homes has been the biggest block to increased homeownership, other factors have also taken their toll. Areas beyond the mainstream market have been less well served in the more tightly regulated environment that has emerged post-financial crisis, and more consumers are falling into this category,’ he explained. ‘For example, we have seen a substantial lift in self-employment in the last five years as the labour market has evolved, but those working for themselves have had fewer tailored financial support products to choose from,’ he added. ‘However, lenders are expecting mortgage availability to improve for these types of clients in 2016. First time buyers in particular are identified as the segment of the market with the biggest growth potential. In the near future, lending levels may look lower after the buy to let rush, but over the long… Continue reading
Most UK borrowers reach mortgage freedom day
Home borrowers in the UK have reached the time of year when they will have earned enough to pay off the annual cost of their mortgage, research shows. Based on the average annual mortgage repayment cost of £7,584 and the average net annual income of £26,023, lender the Halifax has calculated that home owners with a mortgage will have today earned enough on average to cover their mortgage payments for the rest of 2016. Mortgage Freedom Day this year occurs just a day later than in 2015 and is the result of average annual mortgage repayment edging up by £17 during the year. Rental Freedom Day, on the other hand, comes 16 days later on the 05 May, again a day later than in 2015. However, there is a wide variation in Mortgage Freedom Day across the country, with home owners in Scotland and Northern Ireland achieving this on 12 March, followed by Yorkshire and the Humber on 25 March, the North West 26th and the North the 27th. Mortgage Freedom Day for Londoners doesn't arrive until 26 June, three months later than in northern England. Regionally, the North was the first to achieve Rental Freedom Day on 05 April this year, just ahead of Yorkshire and the Humber on 09 April and the East Midlands on the 13th April. Tenants in London have to wait until 13 July. ‘For most home owners mortgage payments are the biggest outgoing every month. Knowing they’ve earned enough to pay off their mortgage for another year should be a reassuring thought. On the other hand, those who rent will need to work a further couple of weeks to have earned enough to cover their annual rental cost,’ said Craig McKinlay, Halifax mortgage director. At local authority district level, new borrowers in West Dunbartonshire recorded the earliest Mortgage Freedom Day in 2016, on 21 February. Eight of the 10 earliest Mortgage Freedom Days this year take place in Scotland, including Inverclyde and East Ayrshire, both 23rd February, and North Lanarkshire on the 25th February. The remaining two local areas are Copeland in Cumbria on the 27th February and Blaenau Gwent on 02 March. Home owners in South Bucks have to wait until the autumn for Mortgage Freedom Day which will be the 12 September, followed by Hammersmith and Fulham on 21 August, Brent in North West London on 19 August and Ealing on 08 August. Continue reading
New home loans falling in Australia, latest data shows
New home loans in Australia saw a further decline in February from the high levels of late 2015, according to the latest report from the Housing Industry Association. Despite a growth in the total number of owner occupier loans, excluding refinancing, new home loans fell by 6.5% month on month and were 2.7 per cent lower than a year earlier. During February the number of loans for the construction of new dwellings eased back by 1.9% in seasonally adjusted terms, while the number of loans for the purchase of new dwellings fell by 15.4%. Compared with a year earlier, loans for dwelling construction were down by 2.8% and there was a 2.6% decline in the number of new dwelling purchase loans over the same period. However, HIA senior economist Shane Garrett said that it is important to remember that new home lending volumes are still high by historic standards. ‘The decline in new home loans during January and February is consistent with our view that new home building will moderate during 2016 from last year’s record highs even though the number of new home starts this year is still likely to be one of the highest on record,’ Garrett explained. ‘While the markets that have risen on the recent wave of construction are likely to continue to perform in the near term, there is a risk that markets which didn’t fully participate in the boom may find this more painful,’ he pointed out. ‘It is vital that state governments are prepared to step in and offer support to our industry as required over the next few years,’ he added. Compared with a year earlier, the number of loans to owner occupiers building and buying new homes in the three months to February 2016, increased most strongly in the Northern Territory with growth of 37.4%, followed by growth of 20.2% in New South Wales and 9.3% in Victoria, New home lending volumes also rose in South Australia by 4.7%, in Queensland by 3% and in the Australian Capital Territory by 2.5% but over the same period, lending volumes fell in Tasmania by 33.1% and in Western Australia by 20.4%. Continue reading