Tag Archives: finance
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
Buying cheaper than renting across whole of UK
Buying is cheaper than renting in every area of the UK, especially in London where rent prices are 56% higher than the average, new research shows. Indeed, potential first time buyers would have lower monthly outgoings if they bought a property than they do renting with average monthly rental prices now surpassing those for the average mortgage repayment. According to the research from Santander Mortgages would be buyers could save themselves £2,300 a year if they were able to purchase their own property. The average monthly rent in the UK is currently £995 per household compared to monthly repayments of £805 for the average first-time buyer household, meaning homeowners could save an average of £190 a month or £2,300 a year. Prospective first time buyers in the South West could make the biggest monthly savings by making the switch from renting to property ownership as average monthly rents exceed mortgage payments by over £192. First time buyers in London would see themselves £179 better off per month. At the other end of the scale are those living in the East of England, where typical first time buyer monthly mortgage payments exceed average rents by only £2. A further breakdown of the figures shows that in Scotland buyers would be £157 better off, in Wales £127, in the North West £121, in Yorkshire and the Humber £113, and in the West Midlands £102. But elsewhere they would be less than £100 better off. In the East Midlands the difference between rent and mortgage was £88, in the North East £83 and in the South East just £28. The research found the average price across the country to be £212,610. This means that a buyer with a 21% deposit, the average deposit size for a UK first time buyer would require £44,648 in order to get on to the property ladder. ‘People assume that buying a property will put them under greater financial pressure, but often the reverse is true. With annual savings averaging well over £2,000, this can really mount up over time and of course once the mortgage is paid off you have a valuable asset to show for it,’ said Miguel Sard, managing director of mortgages at Santander UK. ‘Many prospective first time buyers see the cost of saving for a deposit as prohibitive, but there are many deals available for smaller deposits. Buying a property is a big financial commitment and there are upfront costs to consider, but over the long term the financial benefits can be very significant. Getting independent advice and looking for competitive rates either online or through a mortgage advisor is crucial to get the best mortgage to meet potential home owners individual needs,’ he added. Continue reading
Investigation reveals alarming flood risk for new homes in UK
Floods have already hit thousands of homes in the UK this winter and now an investigation has found that many more homes being built under the government’s new home building drive are also at risk. Nearly half the areas earmarked for fast tracked housing development by a flagship government scheme are at significant risk of flooding, making thousands of new homes potentially uninsurable, according to a Greenpeace investigation. The sites targeted by a recent house building drive unveiled by Chancellor George Osborne include two areas threatened by the latest floods and others which were inundated during previous emergencies, the Greenpeace report says. It claims that the findings raise more questions about the government’s approach to flood risk management amidst growing controversy over delays in the construction of flood defences for existing homes in areas hit by flooding in Cumbria and Lancashire in recent days. Earlier this year, the Chancellor announced a flagship housing scheme which saw 20 brownfield sites around the country designated as new housing zones, with local councils given access to money and experts to expedite the building process. Greenpeace UK researchers used details obtained through Freedom of Information requests to plot the location of these housing zones, and cross referenced this with flood risk maps from the Environment Agency. They found around nine of the 20 zones, comprising a total of 9,000 planned new homes, are in areas now identified as being partially or fully at risk from flooding. Under the terms of a new government flood insurance scheme soon to be implemented, these properties would be excluded from cover. The report claims that this would leave home owners reliant on commercial insurers who may choose not to insure homes built in flood zones, or do so at prohibitively expensive rates. A spokesperson for Flood Re confirmed to Greenpeace that ‘properties built from 2009 onwards’ in flood risk areas are still excluded from the government scheme. ‘It would be irresponsible to incentivise developers to build in such areas simply because those properties could have their insured flood risk ceded to Flood Re,’ the spokesperson added. Greenpeace UK also obtained new figures showing that the number of people employed by the Environment Agency to work on Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management fell by 230, a 5% cut, in the last three years. The agency plays a key role advising councils on flood risk. ‘The current flood emergency isn’t even over yet, and the government is already storing up the next one. Rushing to build thousands of new homes in flood risk areas whilst at the same time cutting flood protection staff is a recipe for disaster,’ said Greenpeace UK chief scientist Dr Doug Parr. ‘When it comes to energy, flood defences, and other big infrastructure projects, we need the government's hands to start following what the government's mouth is saying rather than acting of their own accord,’ he added. The details in the report indicate that in Yorkshire there are flood warnings… Continue reading




