Tag Archives: europe
First time buyer lending in UK up by 25% in June compared to a year ago
There was a growth in the home lending market in the UK in June with the first time buyer market seeing a particular boost in activity, according to the latest figures from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). Home owners borrowed £12.3 billion, up 29% month on month and 12% year on year. They took out 68,200 loans, up 26% on May and 8% on June 2015. First time buyers borrowed £5.5 billion, up 28% on May and 25% on June last year. This equated to 34,300 loans, up 24% month on month and 17% year on year. Home movers borrowed £6.9 billion, up 33% on May and up 5% compared to a year ago. This represented 33,900 loans, up 28% month on month and up 0.3% on June 2015. Remortgage activity totalled £5.6 billion, up 8% on May and 6% compared to a year ago. This came to 32,400 loans, up 4% month on month but down 2% compared to a year ago. Landlords borrowed £2.9 billion, up 12% month on month but down 15% year on year. This came to 18,300 loans in total, up 8% compared to May and 17% compared to June 2015. On an unadjusted basis in the second quarter of the year home owners borrowed £30 billion, down 2% quarter on quarter and 7% year on year. They took out 169,600 loans, up 4% on the first quarter and 3% on the same quarter in 2015. First time buyers borrowed £13.7 billion, up 23% on the first quarter of the year and up 21% on the same quarter in 2015. This equated to 87,100 loans, up 23% month on month and 14% year on year. Home movers borrowed £16.4 billion, down 16% on first quarter and 2% compared to a year ago. This represented 82,600 loans, down 10% quarter on quarter and 6% on the second quarter 2015. Remortgage activity totalled £16.9 billion, up 10% on the first quarter and 25% compared to a year ago. This came to 98,700 loans, up 10% quarter on quarter and 17% compared to a year ago. Landlords borrowed £8 billion, down 46% compared to the first quarter of the year and down 9% year on year. This came to 51,600 loans in total, a drop of 45% compared to the first quarter and down 11% year on year compared to the second quarter of 2015. The CML now publishes seasonally adjusted monthly and quarterly data (see attached), alongside the normal unadjusted data. Paul Smee, CML director general said that this makes it easier to spot underlying trends. ‘These figures reveal growth in house purchase activity and in particular for first- time buyers. As ever, there is uncertainty and it will take more time and patience to understand how the market will evolve in the current environment as these figures predominantly cover activity in the run up to the referendum,’ he explained. ‘We still believe that the mortgage market is well capitalised, resilient… Continue reading
More affordable houses to be built at key London regeneration site
The Mayor of London has approved plans for the first major housing development at the Old Oak regeneration site in West London, after intervening to boost the number of affordable homes in the scheme. The Oaklands development will see 605 new homes built, together with a nursery, health centre and commercial space. A target of 50% affordable housing has been agreed for the development, following an intervention by the Mayor Sadiq Khan to boost the number of affordable homes through investment and a profit-sharing mechanism. Old Oak and Park Royal has the potential to deliver 25,500 new homes and 65,000 jobs over the next 30 to 40 years, as well as becoming the key transport interchange for Crossrail and HS2. ‘The development marks a significant step in realising the huge potential of this part of the capital. I am pleased that we have been able to increase the proportion of genuinely affordable homes as part of our ongoing efforts to fix the capital's housing crisis,’ said Khan. ‘The scale and ambition for this development shows London is very much open for business. Despite the uncertainty caused by the UK's vote to leave the European Union, it remains clear that developers and investors see long term potential in our city,’ he added. According to Neil Hadden, chief executive at Genesis Housing Association, the redevelopment at Oaklands in one of Hammersmith and Fulham's most important regeneration sites. ‘We will now be able to provide hundreds more affordable homes for Londoners on a once derelict site. Partnerships such as the one we have with Queens Park Rangers Football Club (QPR) enable us to invest, not only in building new homes, but in developing new communities. We will now be able to provide hundreds more affordable homes for Londoners on a once derelict site,’ he added. QPR co-chairman Tony Fernandes said the firm is committed to bringing forward other development sites in Old Oak as soon as possible to create the homes that London desperately needs. Of the 242 affordable homes, half will be for social and affordable rent, with the other half being for shared ownership. The application was approved by the Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation, the organisation that has planning control over the Old Oak regeneration site, on July 13, 2016. The project will also include a new link road into Old Oak which could unlock further development north of the Grand Union Canal. The initial application from Queens Park Rangers Football Club and their development partner Genesis Housing Association proposed 200 affordable homes or 33% of the total. The scheme has now attracted GLA Affordable Housing Grant Funding to raise the number of affordable homes to 242, some 40% of the total with a review mechanism to ensure that any surplus profit as the scheme is implemented will be used to provide more affordable units up to 50%. Continue reading
Rents still rising across most of UK but growth is slowing
Average residential rents in the UK continued to rise in July with demand still more than supply but the rate of growth is slowing, the latest index data shows. Excluding Greater London the average rent agreed is now £779 per month, some 2.3% higher than a year ago while the average rent in London is now £1,599 per month, up 4% over the year. The growth has continued since the beginning of the year and the outlook remains strong despite the growth slowing, says the rental index report from HomeLet. The data suggests that landlords have been able to continue securing higher rents on new tenancies despite the economic uncertainties created by the UK’s vote to leave the European Union in June. It mirrors data from the housing market, with mortgage lenders also reporting modest growth in house prices in the month following the Brexit vote although many agree that is still too early to measure what affect Brexit sentiment has had on the market. Looking forward, the fundamental forces in the private rental sector remain unchanged, the report suggests with Britain’s growing population, the relative unaffordability of house prices, and the lack of new homes being built combined with the reduction in social housing suggest that the private rental sector will continue to be an ever important source of homes in the years and decades to come. A breakdown of the figures show that there is considerable regional variation recorded by the index. Month on month rents increased the most in East Anglia with a rise of 3.7% and the region also topped the annual growth with a year on year rise of 9.7%, taking the average to £897. But rents fell by 3.7% month on month in Scotland but are up 1.4% year on year to an average of £676. The only other region to see a month on month fall was the North East with a decline of 0.4% to £537 and a year on year fall of 5%. Year on year rents have fallen in the South West by 2.1% but are up by 0.7% month on month to £894 and by 0.5% in the North West to £660 but the region has seen month on month growth of 0.5%. Ultimately, rents will be determined by supply and demand in the private rental sector, according to Martin Totty, chief executive officer of HomeLet’s parent company Barbon Insurance Group. ‘Population growth will continue to increase demand, and that the housing stock isn’t growing quickly enough to meet that demand. However, with rents ultimately limited to a tenant’s ability to pay, rents are likely to continue to climb, albeit at the slowing pace noted most recently,’ he said. ‘We won’t know exactly how Brexit is impacting the private rental sector and it will be several months yet until we see some clearly established trends in the marketplace. It seems likely that with lenders concerned about the prospect… Continue reading




