First-time Buyers
Lending hits six-year high
Mortgage lending in the second quarter of the year was higher than at any time since 2007.
Gross mortgage advances to UK borrowers were up 23% in Q2 against the first quarter, according to the Bank of England.
Mortgage lending of £41.6bn in Q2 2013 was also 13% higher year-on-year.
As lenders’ have loosened their lending criteria, the value of residential loans advanced to first-time buyers has increased by £1.9bn over the past year to £8bn, up 31%.
The proportion of mortgage lending at over 90% rose from 2.1% in Q1 2013 to 2.5% in Q2 2013.
Lenders are stretching income multiples too with 24.8% of lending now done at over 3 x income multiple for joint applicants.
The ratio of new lending at both a high loan-to-value (LTV) and high income multiple increased by 1.6% to the same level recorded in Q2 2009. Net advances in Q2 2013, or gross mortgage lending minus UK mortgage repayments, amounted to £5.1bn, 8.6% more than Q2 2012.
Average mortgage rates are also at their lowest levels since records began, falling from 3.65% in Q1 2013 to 3.47% last quarter.
Lending for property purchase accounted for 65.0% of new advances – a rise of 1.6% over the quarter. Buy-to-let lending has also jumped from £3.9bn in Q2 last year to £5bn in Q2 this year.
New reported arrears levels have fallen 12% year-on-year to 32,500, or 292,000 in total. New cases taken into possession totalled 7,795 in Q2 2013, a 10% reduction from Q2 2012.
Mark Harris, chief executive of mortgage broker SPF Private Clients, said:
“Growing confidence in the housing market as prices rise, particularly in London and the south-east, is also stoking the market.
“More first-time buyers are returning to the market, with a small increase in those borrowing more than 90% LTV. With the Help to Buy scheme guaranteeing loans for buyers with modest deposits, we expect this trend to continue. While George Osborne has stated that high loan-to-value mortgages are not ‘exotic weapons of mass destruction’, borrowers must still ensure that they can afford a high LTV mortgage before taking the plunge.”