Tag Archives: housing
January saw 14% fall in mortgage lending in the UK
Gross mortgage lending in the UK reached £14.3 billion in January, a 14% decrease from December, according to the latest estimate from the Council of Mortgage Lenders. It is well below December 2014’s gross lending total of £16.6 billion and is also 11% lower than the £16.1 billion lent in January 2014. According to CML chief economist Bob Pannell, the softer pace of approvals through the second half of last year contributed to the relatively weak pace of mortgage lending in January. ‘Although seasonal factors will continue to weigh on activity levels for a while longer, we expect the underlying picture to pick up over the coming months, in line with stronger earnings and employment, gentle interest rate trends and recent stamp duty changes,’ he explained. ‘As we forecast at the end of last year, gross mortgage lending remains on course to reach an expected £222 billion this year,’ he added. According to Adrian Gill, director of Your Move and Reeds Rains estate agents, regulatory change has actually improved the borrowing process, making it more efficient, and leading to better outcomes for buyers. ‘Mortgage approvals may take longer to navigate, but this is because brokers are doing a more thorough job, and front end demand is vibrant and warming up,’ he said. He also pointed out that January activity is not a fair foreteller of what’s to come. ‘The stride of lending may have slowed, but the underlying appetite is growing. House price growth has tapered off at the higher end market, but in places where properties are more affordable and within reach of a leg up from Help to Buy, demand is energetic,’ he explained. ‘The market is only just starting to feel the effects of stamp duty changes, which is taking the edge of buying, and confidence is also buoyed by low interest rates and attractive mortgage products. All the footings are in place for savvy buyers to make great deals on homes, building further on the housing recovery,’ he added. Continue reading
Rents in England and Wales up almost 3% in last 12 months
Residential rents in England and Wales increased by 2.8% in the last year to an average of £763 and are now 16% higher than in 2010, according to the latest rental index to be published. The data also shows that over last five years rents have grown by an average 3% per year but after inflation is taken into account this amounts to just 0.6% annually, the buy to let index from Your Move and Reeds Rains shows. In absolute terms, the average residential rent across England and Wales has grown by £107 since January 2010, to reach £763 as of January 2015. This amounts to an average annual rent rise of 3.0% over the last half decade. However, this represents a real terms increase of 0.6% per annum when adjusted for inflation over the same period. Most recently, rents have fallen on a monthly basis, down 0.6% between December 2014 and January 2015. On an annual basis, rents are 2.8% higher than was seen last January. ‘The nature and affordability of UK housing is transforming before our eyes. In the last five years the private rented sector has successfully absorbed an unprecedented influx of tenants, while rental prices have broadly tracked inflation,’ said Adrian Gill, director of estate agents Reeds Rains and Your Move. ‘As ever, the devil is in the detail but as this growth accelerates, even more investment will be necessary for the industry to keep up. So we need more buy to let landlords to help solve the crisis in demand for homes to rent,’ he explained. He pointed out that it is also important to recognise that these figures don’t float in a hermetically sealed chamber. ‘Many other aspects of finance and the housing market feed into this sector. Rents represent a landlord’s attempt to recoup investment at a reasonable market rate dictated by consumer prices, inflation, and basic principles of supply and demand. Over the long term, rents also tend to reflect higher house prices,’ he said. ‘In real terms, rents have risen only incrementally. But any real and sustained growth in rents should offer a clear lesson. As with the purchase market, the only clear way to make rented housing dramatically more affordable is to build far more homes, far more quickly than is currently the case. And until this happens, landlords are likely to continue to earn double digit returns on their investments,’ he added. Eight out of 10 regions saw lower rents in January 2015 than in December 2014. Only the East of England and the North East defied this downward trend, with 1.3% and 0.7% monthly increases in market rents, respectively. The dominant movement towards lower rents in January was led by a 2% month on month drop in the South West, closely followed by the North West with a 1.7% drop, and the East… Continue reading
Annual savings of £742 for those getting on the UK housing ladder
First time buyers in the UK are £742 or 9% a year better off with their own home compared to those who rent, according to new research by the Halifax. The average monthly buying cost, including mortgage payments, associated with a first time buyer buying a three bedroom house stood at £658 in December 2014, some £62 lower than the typical monthly rent of £720 paid on the same property type. With the price of a typical first time buyer home rising by 8% in 2014, the difference has narrowed from £80 or 12% to £62 since 2013 as the average monthly buying costs grew by £46 while average monthly rents increased by £28. However, at the same time, the number of first-time buyers increased by an estimated 22% in 2014, with 326,500 first time buyers getting on the ladder, the highest annual total since 2007 when it was 359,900. In 2014, first time buyers in London had, in cash terms, experienced the largest benefit from buying rather than renting a home. The average monthly cost of £1,275 for those who have bought compares to an average monthly rental price of £1,387, a saving of £112 a month or £1,338 over the year. The second largest difference is found in the North West where first time buyers were paying 17% less a month, £109 a month or £1,304 annually, than the typical private tenant in the region. The smallest differences between the monthly cost of buying and renting are in the East Midlands at £6 or 1%, and the South East at £15 or 2%. The research shows that the gap between cost of buying and renting still substantially higher than in 2009. Five years ago the average monthly cost of buying was £15 higher than the typical rent paid at £576 versus £561. Since 2009 the substantial improvement in the affordability of buying relative to renting largely reflects a 28% or £159 rise in average monthly rental costs over the past five years. This increase was twice as fast as the 14% or £83 rise in average monthly buying costs. ‘Average home buying costs are significantly lower than average rental costs, providing first-time buyers with a large financial saving if they can get on the housing ladder,’ said Craig McKinlay, Halifax mortgage director. ‘While the timescales associated with raising a sufficient deposit to buy a home present a hurdle to many potential first time buyers, the significant difference in costs between buying and renting, combined with still low mortgage rates, increased consumer confidence and the Help to Buy scheme, have all been factors driving the substantial rise in first-time buyers over the past two years,’ he added. Continue reading




