The number of buyers in the UK housing market has risen three months in a roll, as lower prices boost interest, according to figures from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). But it said first-time buyers were still largely frozen out of the market, as lenders demand high deposits. Existing homeowners are the main source of the increased interest, as well as investors.
Archive for the ‘First-time buyers’ Category
Buy enquiries still on the rise
Wednesday, February 18th, 2009Base rate falls while house prices rise
Friday, February 6th, 2009
The Bank of England cut interest rates to a new record low of 1% on Thursday. While the Halifax reported that house prices rose 1.9% during January. This is in contrast with Nationwide’s figures last week which showed 1.3% drop in house prices. As the credit-crunch has shown, the supply of finance has driven up house prices. There will be no full scale recovery in the UK property market until finance becomes easier to obtain, especially for first-time buyers. And with rising unemployment, who knows what the future will bring!
Mortgage approval slumps as banks run out of cash
Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008In a year, mortgages for people buying a home have dived by 46% as Britain’s banks run out of money to lend. Figures from the British Bankers Association (BBA) showed mortgage approvals for house purchase in March tumbling to its lowest figure since records began in 1997. This shows the extent to which banks are tightening their belts as they find themselves unable to secure funding for mortgages. Borrowers needing to remortgage or purchase a home are finding lenders have raised rates to reflect their own higher borrowing costs and increase margins on mortgages. Many are also demanding higher deposits to protect against house price falls and to raise the quality of their loan books. The rising cost of securing funding on the money markets has seen the inter bank lending rate Libor rise to 0.9% above the bank rate of 5% - the historical average is 0.13%. This has substantially pushed up the cost of new tracker rate mortgages, which are heavily influenced by Libor. The BBA said it expected lending to continue to weaken due to the continuing decline in mortgage approvals.
Lenders raise rates despite cut by the Bank
Saturday, April 12th, 2008The Bank of England cut its base rate by o.25% to 5% on Thursday to stop the economy’s slide towards recession. However, relief for home owners was instantly undermined by a new wave of mortgage rate increases from Britain’s biggest lenders. Many lenders are yet to pass on the recent base rate reductions - instead they are busy increasing rates, demanding larger deposits, tightening lending criteria and, in some cases, withdrawing deals from the market altogether. Most of the big lenders, including Halifax, Nationwide, the Woolwich, Cheltenham & Gloucester and First Direct also said within minutes of the Bank’s announcement that they will be cutting their standard variable mortgage rates by the full 0.25%. Both Nationwide and Alliance & Leicester are believed to have been overwhelmed by applications from borrowers coming off cheap fixed deals and want to choke off the demand with yet another big increase of upto 0.35% in less than two weeks. The increases followed similar moves from Woolwich, Halifax and Abbey.
Has the Bank of England lost control?
Thursday, April 10th, 2008Some are questioning whether the financial turmoil has rendered the Bank of England powerless to direct how much the biggest financial names on the High Street charge for credit and pay customers for their deposits. For many, today’s predicted cut in base rate will be meaningless. While banks and building societies have been cutting savings rates, they have also been raising mortgage rates for new borrowers. The only people to benefit would be existing mortgage customers on the track rates which follows the movement of the base rate. The current market turmoil could however be providing banks and building societies with the opportunity to rebuild their profit margins after being hit (at various levels) by the subprime market. Once again, the consumers are paying for the cost of the financial industries’ imprudence.
The last 100% mortgage has now been axed
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008
The last 100% mortgage on offer has been scrapped by Abbey following similar decisions by its rivals. Since the credit crunch began last summer, more than 70% of mortgage deals have disappeared. Before Christmas, 33% of lenders offered mortgages of 100% or more. Now the only remaining 100% deals, from Bristol & West and Bank of Ireland, do not qualify as ‘mainstream’ mortgages. They are aimed at first-time buyers and require a homeowner’s parents to guarantee the loan. Typically, today’s buyer must have a deposit of 5% or more. And to secure a competitive deal, 25% is needed, as lenders charge higher rates for those with smaller deposits.
Mortgage criteria getting tighter
Sunday, March 23rd, 2008Several small building societies have been restricting or halting lending as a result of the financial turmoil. With lenders’ funds drying up, higher deposits are being demanded from first-time buyers. The Co-operative Bank now demands a higher deposit by cutting its maximum loan-to-value ratio from 95% to 90%. Bigger lenders, such as the Halifax and the Woolwich, have slightly increased the interest rates on certain tracker or fixed-rate deals, while making other deals available only to those able to put down a 40% deposit. The Cheltenham & Gloucester, part of Lloyds TSB, has also raised the interest rate charged on some deals. More than a million fixed-rate deals, typically lasting for two years, are due to expire in 2008, which will add to demand. As a result, the smaller building societies are withdrawing deals instead of being swamped by demand. Those wishing to move house are being told to act fast on mortgage deals as lenders are changing their deals frequently, sometimes several times a week.

Homebuyers with no deposit are finding it tough
Thursday, March 6th, 2008Borrowers with bad debts are getting better mortgage deals than first-time buyers without a deposit. The cheapest deal for a first-time buyer with good credit history but without a deposit is with Bradford & Bingley - 6.89% with £999 fee. But a sub-prime borrower with missed mortgage repayments (in the past year, one of which is in the last six months), could get a rate of 6.69% with a £995 fee with Chelsea BS. However, those with a 25% deposit could get a rate of 4.75% from First Direct with a £1,498 fee. A year ago, 27 banks and building societies offered 100% mortgages compared with just 11 today at much higher rates. As the credit crunch hits banks and building societies, first-time buyers have been left out in the cold.

Nationwide deposits up to 25%
Monday, February 25th, 2008Nationwide increased the minimum deposit required to secure its best rates from 10% of the value of the property to 25%. With the average price of a London house now more than £300,000, buyers will have to raise at least £75,000 up front. It is a major blow for first-time buyers in particular. The clampdown by Nationwide comes as banks and building societies tighten lending conditions following the credit crunch. Until today, borrowers needed only to raise a deposit of 10% or more to take advantage of Nationwide’s best rates. They now need 25% or more - or face an extra 0.2% of interest. The rise only affects new borrowers and wipes out the benefit they would have enjoyed following this month’s cut in interest rates by the Bank of England. Nervous rival lenders are set to follow suit as they chase margins rather than market share.

Northern Rock axes 125% mortgage
Friday, February 22nd, 2008Northern Rock has pulled its 125% mortgage after heavy public criticism for the super-size homeloan. The troubled bank will no longer offer the Together mortgage to new customers as it seeks to move towards low-risk lending and shrink its mortgage book. Alliance & Leicester, Abbey, Coventry Building Society and Godiva all pulled their 125% homeloans earlier this week. The only lender still offering 125% mortgages is Birmingham Midshires and experts have suggested it will soon take the product off the market. Fears have been raised that those coming to the end of 100%-plus mortgages may be in for a payment shock and unable to find credit elsewhere. Mortgage lenders have been reassessing their ranges in response to tighter market conditions and have become more reluctant to lend to those with chequered credit histories or high loan-to-value ratios.
