Grainne Gilmore, Economics Correspondent
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Mortgage lending slumped 7 per cent last month as the credit squeeze and sliding house prices continued to take a toll on borrowers and lenders.
Homeowners and buyers borrowed £24 billion in February, down from £25.9 billion in January, and 6 per cent less than in February last year, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) said. The CML gave warning that the “slower phase in the housing market” would continue unless the Bank of England made more effort to help mortgage lenders. This came despite the Bank's pledge to double its weekly funding to more than £10 billion.
Michael Coogan, director-general of the CML, welcomed the Bank's move “as a step in the right direction”, but said “a programme of more aggressive, broader-based intervention would be entirely appropriate for the Bank in the current environment of uncertainty”.
Cash-strapped borrowers are facing increasing difficulties in getting a mortgage as lenders seek to protect their margins. A scarcity of funding for lenders on the credit markets has led most banks and building societies to raise their rates and become more picky about their customers. Homebuyers who do not have a 5 per cent deposit are now struggling to get a mortgage.
A significant number of lenders, including Nationwide, the UK's biggest building society, are charging higher rates for borrowers who do not have a 25 per cent deposit.
Earlier this week, Kate Barker, a member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee, said that first-time buyers would still face difficulties in affording a mortgage even if house prices fell further. “We may see prices adjust downwards but there is no clear evidence that affordability will improve,” Ms Barker said.
The lack of funding in the markets prompted two building societies to withdraw all but their most expensive mortgage deals on Tuesday. Three other building societies are restricting their offers to buyers and homeowners in their local area.
At the same time, Halifax, Britain's biggest mortgage lender, increased its mortgage rates for the third time in six weeks, raising its two-year tracker deal by 0.25 per cent for new customers, despite the fact that interest rates were kept on hold at 5.25 per cent.
Mr Coogan said: “Demand for mortgages remains strong but cannot be fully met from existing funding. This has led many lenders to reduce their product ranges, increase their mortgage prices and, in some cases, to reduce their lending capacity.”
Experts have raised concerns that the difficulties facing first-time buyers could further depress the market. Mel Bien, of Savills Private Finance, a mortgage broker, said: “First-time buyers are the life blood of any housing market. If people can't sell on their starter homes, they can't move up the ladder and everything grinds to a halt.”
Philip Hammond, Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, said: “This is more evidence of how the credit squeeze is affecting ordinary families. Yet again, people will be asking if Gordon Brown has properly prepared our country for the economic challenges we now face.”
Last week the CML said that the number of new homebuyers taking out mortgages fell to a nine-year low in January. Only 50,300 buyers were granted a home loan, more than a third fewer than in January 2007.
Mortgage activity is likely, however, to be supported by the large number of homeowners, estimated to be 1.4 million, who are coming to the end of their fixed-rate deals this year.
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FOR what happens next study the failure of japan inc....
liquidity destroys,excessive money printing destroys completly
jp
jpandya, zurich, switzerland
I have tried repeatedly to contact Halifax today concerning a matter concerning my mortgage. All I get is a recorded message stating that they are experiencing a technical difficulty and hope to have normal service resored as soon as possible. This has been going on now for several hours and it is the fist time it is happening in three years of regular contacts. Worrying!
Jay Powell, Cardiff, UK
As a home owner, who has worked hard to pay of a mortgage early, I welcome the current squeeze on mortgage applications. If such restrictions force down house prices that is to be encouraged. Lenders who have arranged no deposit 100%+ mortgages, and their co-conspirators Estate Agents and Valuers (who have little or no professional training or academic qualifications, other than to get the highest commissions possible), are directly responsible for the current problems. Hopefully, 80% of them will go out of business, that will allow sensibility and reality to return to the property market.
Any substantial correction in the market will only affect a relatively small number of mortgage holders. But the longer term effect will result in a more sustainable and transparent mortgage industry
Pw, croydon, surrey
So, belatedly mortgage lenders have acquired some common sense, by not lending money to people who do not even have a deposit to put down. Anyone of those people who have taken out a 100% plus mortgage should sell up now and cut their losses. Other mortgagees should seek the best long-term fixed rate deal they can get, because regardless of what the BoE does to the base rate, variable mortgage rates will carry on rising for some considerable time to come. That is the only way the mortgage lenders will be able to recoup their shortfall in funding.
Paul, Coventry,
The way credit has been fueling the hyper prices of homes,in essence is the same if you print money into the capitalist system beyond its real values.
This will and has caused a parody of the German experience in the way they printed money into the system and caused hyperinflation on all general goods. As for all sence and purpose credit is literaly a licence to print money, when chickens come home to roost as the previous person has said in this. That the specific source of this capitalist enterprise isbased purely on the greed of lenders, in the housing market such as we see in subprime morgages of the American or British kind. This will effect the economy.
This has fueled ridicoulous prices, in which only a fool could
seriously believe they can maintain this balloon.
In reality these morgages can only to be payed for over 50 and not 25 years at these current rates.
Future generations will suffer the consequences of this greed .
William McLinden, Liverpool,
Considering:
1) The mortgage securities market is completely frozen
2) House prices are widely forecast to keep falling
3) The cost of living is at a record high
4) The market was still booming this time last year
Then the fact that mortgage lending is only down 6% from last year is a remarkable performance.
What we are witnessing is a consorted effort to persuade the Bank and the Government to reopen the cheap money flood gates - anything less double digit HPI will not be tolerated!!
A Harris, Kettering, UK
The banks are increasing their margins in Australia too. Rudd our PM has made it easier to switch lenders but there is no point as all banks are increasing by the same amount. Banks take it in turns to lead with the increases (e.g. mortgage up .36 base rate up .25). So no one bank is seen as the bad boy. Unlike the UK our rates are increasing. We are close to 9% currently. Just put off changing the car and dumped the cash off the mortgage.
Andrew, Melbourne, Australia
"Chickens coming home to roost!". The housing market depends on first time buyers. If first time buyers can get mortgages of more than 90% (ie without a saved deposit) then the worlds the limit as far as estate agents and lenders go. I blame them both for the super inflation of house prices in the last decade.
Let`s get back to normality!
Colin , Surrey,