UK mortgage borrowing is recovering, lenders say 20/05/2010
Mortgage borrowing is picking up, lenders say Mortgage borrowing by house buyers is recovering, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) has said. The number of loans made to home buyers rose by 25% between February and March, to 45,000. And borrowing by first-time buyers rebounded faster than that by existing home owners, the CML said. But it warned that mortgage rationing might continue for many years unless the new government helped lenders raise finance. "Today's figures indicate there is currently some momentum to house purchase lending," said the CML's director general Michael Coogan. "But for the sake of the future health of the housing and mortgage markets, the new government will need to focus on the critical issue of funding and how to address the issues arising from the repayment of the emergency support provided during the financial crisis," he added. "The UK is at risk of a chronic under-supply of credit - and the rationing of mortgages for customers - for years to come." First-time buyers Lending to all house buyers in the first quarter of the year was still 35% less than in the last three months of last year. Continue reading the main story Only time will tell if this genuinely reflects a tentative sign of easing Michael Coogan Council of Mortgage Lenders But the CML said that not too much should be read into that comparison. "No trend can be inferred from this... given the distortion caused by the end of the stamp duty holiday in December," said Mr Coogan. The CML argued that year on year, lending to house buyers had now risen for the ninth month in a row. And it pointed to an improvement in the position of first-time buyers. For the second month in a row, the average deposit they had to put down stood at 24% of the purchase price, slightly less than the average 25% they have had to put down since the start of 2009. Between February and March, the number of loans made to first-timers rose by 27%, compared with a 24% increase for existing home owners. "Only time will tell if this genuinely reflects a tentative sign of easing, but for the time being deposit constraints remain tight in all areas of lending," the CML said. Problem With house prices rising over the past year, lenders have become slightly less wary about lending. Earlier this month, the financial information service Moneyfacts reported that the number of mortgage deals available was 36% higher at the start of May than it had been at the start of the year. Although there were still very few deals with 0% or 5% deposits, the number asking for a 10% or 15% down-payment had gone up from 461 to 520. Despite this, lenders have been warning that they face a huge problem in the next few years. Banks and some larger building societies have to work out how to repay more than £300bn in emergency funding given to them by the government during the banking crisis in 2008. The need to repay that money is likely to mean continued rationing of funds for mortgage borrowers. So far, no plans have been forthcoming, either from within the banking industry or from the UK's financial authorities, to deal with the matter.
HIPs have gone, but devotion to red tape left a trail of damage 20/05/2010
From Times Online May 20, 2010 HIPs have gone, but devotion to red tape left a trail of damage The Conservative abhorrence of HIPs was well-known, which means that the abolition of the scheme is no surprise. The speed of the announcement, however, highlights the new Government’s belief that the Home Information Packs were a drag on the recovery of the housing market and served no other purpose but the creation of yet more unnecessary red tape. Eric Pickles, the Communities Secretary, and Grant Shapps, the housing minister, underlined this view by cutting red tape away from a ramshackle doll’s house at this morning’s announcement. They were accompanied by a “thrilled to bits” Kirstie Allsopp, who has always been a vocal opponent of HIPs — which were Labour’s only reform of the housebuying process and ill-fated almost from the start. As the TV cameras filmed the stunt you could almost hear the cry “HIPs are gone, Hurrah!” from estate agents who were unanimous in the support of abolition. Related Links Home Information Packs are scrapped Peter Rollings, managing director of Marsh & Parsons, a London firm of agents, described HIPs as “doomed” from the moment ministers in the previous Government were forced to ditch key elements of the pack such as the structural survey. As a result buyers who were already suspicious of a dossier of information provided by a seller felt able to disregard the contents of the pack. Everyone is now waiting to see whether more people are now tempted to put their homes up for sale. Outside London the HIP, which cost an average of £500, was regarded as a disincentive to speculative sellers — who can often become enthusiastic sellers when they discover how much their property can fetch. The only casualties will be those who often borrowed heavily to train as inspectors and will now be out of work. If the new coalition government ever forgets its resolve to do away with bureaucracy and start imposing regulations on any sector it should remember the situation of these unfortunate people whose jobs were created apparently only for the creation of red tape.