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UK mortgage arrears at lowest rate for more than a decade in 2015

Mortgage arrears in the UK are at their lowest for more than a decade with fewer than one in 1,000 ended in repossession in 2015, according to the latest data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders. Beneath the headline figures, the CML quarterly data shows home owner mortgage arrears running at 1.03% of all loans at the end of 2015, with buy to let at a lower rate of 0.31%, continuing the recent trend of a lower prevalence of arrears in the buy to let market. However, the picture is reversed on repossessions, with around one repossession per 2,500 mortgages in the buy to let market in the fourth quarter of the year, compared with one in 5,000 in the homeowner market. Across the whole market, most had relatively modest levels of arrears at under 5% of the mortgage balance. The number of loans with arrears in the most severe band, representing 10% or more of the mortgage balance, was 23,700, down from 24,200 at the end of 2014. The CML report says that the modest decline in the most serious arrears band may partly reflect distortions in the timing of possessions, but the overall arrears trend is clearly down. At 10,200, the total number of repossessions in 2015 was less than half the number in 2014, down from 20,900 but the report says that caution is needed on the year on year comparison, because the timing of some possessions may have been affected by the aftermath of a court case which has been causing lenders to review their processes. However, it is likely that the underlying trend is still emphatically down. ‘It is good news that the levels of mortgage arrears and repossessions remain low and falling. But, at the risk of sounding as if we are crying wolf, we would continue to urge all borrowers to plan ahead for a time when the interest rate environment may be less benevolent. Lenders do not wish to see borrowers who are coping currently falling into difficulty if and when rates do eventually rise,’ said CML director general Paul Smee. The figures are a sign of a period of relative stability for both owner occupiers and landlords when it comes to managing borrowing, according to Kevin Purvey, chairman of the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA). ‘Lending volumes forecast to rise, the rigours of lenders’ affordability checks will help borrowers avoid a future scenario where they become overstretched. However, continuing delays to the Bank of England’s first rate rise should not breed complacency,’ he explained. ‘With mortgage rates at record lows, there is still plenty of reason for households to think ahead, weigh up their monthly balance sheet and consider remortgaging to help prepare for the inevitable rise. Changes to tax allowances will give landlords added incentive to look at their remortgage options in 2016,’ he pointed out. ‘Lender competition remains high, which means intermediaries will be at the heart of the continuing… Continue reading

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Home ownership still out of reach for many in UK due to buying costs

Home ownership in UK is still out of reach for many would be buyers as new research shows that the average first time buyers will have paid over £52,000 in rent. Indeed, a first time buyer purchasing their first house this year will have spent £52,900 on rent by the time they get on the first rung of the ladder, and future first time buyer can expect to spend 22%. The data compiled by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) for the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) also shows that the average first time buyer in England in 2016 will have spent 16.4% of their total lifetime earnings on rent for all the years they were a tenant. Those buying a property for the first time this year in the North East will have spent £31,300 on rent, the lowest amount in England. Whereas in London, the average amount spent is more than double that, at £68,300. The South East is the only region other than London where the total lifetime rent spent is above the English average with the total rent expenditure equating to £55,900. Last year alone on average people in the UK spent 22% of their wages on rent, increasing to 30% in London. Those living in the East enjoyed the most affordable rents due to relatively high earnings in the region, yet rent still accounted for 18.9% of their disposable income. People that move out of their family home at the age of 18, will typically rent for 13 years before buying their first property. The report found those leaving home and starting to rent this year, will spend an average of £64,400 before they are able to buy their first property, some 22% more than current first time buyers getting on the housing ladder this year will be spending. Those leaving home and starting to live independently in London will continue to be worse off, as they will spend an average of £91,500 on rent before they can buy their first home, some £23,100 more than those buying in the capital this year. ‘The rising cost of rent in this country is a huge issue, and is preventing tenants from being able to save to buy a home. Our Cost of Renting report reveals that tenants are already spending a significant proportion of their income on rent, and therefore struggling to save any money,’ said David Cox, ARLA managing director. ‘However, as house price affordability worsens and interest rates start rising, more pressure will be put on renting with weekly rent likely to rise, so home ownership will remain out of reach for many,’ he pointed out. ‘Rents are becoming alarmingly unaffordable due to the lack of available housing; the North-South divide we’re currently seeing in the UK is a clear illustration of this. The London rental market is… Continue reading

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Mortgage rate savings have been significant in UK over last two years

Fixed rate mortgages in the UK fell to their lowest levels in 2015, whilst the standard variable rate remained static, meaning the potential savings for borrowers have increased. Indeed potential savings have improved significantly by 50% over the course of the past two years, according to the latest research from Halifax. The average interest rate on a new fixed rate mortgage fell a further 0.59over the past 12 months, whilst there was no change in the standard variable rate over the same period. This means that the average fixed rate now stands at 2.66% compared with the average standard variable rate of 4.49%, with the gap between the two widening by 1.81 percentage points since August 2012. As a result the amount homeowners could be saving by switching to a fixed rate deal has increased by 50% in the past two years. In November 2013, the average monthly payment of a home owner who took out a two year fixed rate on a £100,000 mortgage would have been £485. At the same time, the payment on a standard variable rate mortgage would have been £551, a monthly saving of £66. According to the research a borrower taking out a fixed rate in November 2015 would be paying £457 a month on a £100,000 loan compared with £555 on the average standard variable rate, saving of £99 a month and 50% higher than two years’ earlier. ‘With the base rate remaining at record low levels for another year, fixed rate mortgages fell further in 2015. Over the past three years average rates have fallen sharply, significantly widening the gap between them and standard variable rates. As a result, borrowers have been able to make considerable savings,’ said Craig McKinlay, mortgages director at the Halifax. ‘Whilst remortgaging activity has picked up in the last year, this is only in line with new loans. As a result, remortgage activity’s share of all lending has remained relatively subdued, especially when compared to its strength in 2008,’ he explained. ‘Without the concern of a base rate rise in the immediate future it seems borrowers’ appetite to remortgage has been dulled, meaning that some could be missing out on significant savings,’ he added. The research also shows that remortgage activity remains well below the 2008 peak. The widening gap between fixed rates and standard variable rates appears to have helped improve remortgaging’s share of all new mortgage lending from 29% in August 2012 to 32% in November 2015. However, this growth is far slower than that seen in the gap between fixed and variable rates, and demonstrates that remortgaging remains considerably below the peaks of 50% that it reached in 2008. Continue reading

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