Mortgage
sales hit problems
Released on
= July 4, 2005, 8:41 am
Press Release
Author = Richard Green
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = Mortgage lenders and first-time buyers feel the pinch
from the current housing market situation
Press Release
Body = The housing market has been buoyant over the past few years,
but mortgage providers and first-time buyers are both now facing
a tough time. Following announcements from the Bank of England that
there has been an overall decline in the total number of UK home-buyers,
and a declaration from the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) that
the number of disputes concerning mis-sold mortgage endowments has
now hit record levels, it seems that mortgage lenders are facing
a bleak time. Add to this the results of a new survey, by the Edinburgh
Solicitors Property Centre, which shows potential first-time buyers
fear that they may never
get onto the property market, and you start to see a worrying picture
of the housing market emerge.
The problem
with the mis-selling of endowment mortgage products has recently
made the headlines in the world of personal finance. The FOS admitted
receiving 70,000 new complaints about endowment mortgages, the equivalent
of 1,300 a week, compared
to just 300 a week three years ago.
The main grounds
for complaint revolve around people who believe that mis-selling
had occurred regarding policies. Many consumers feel that the endowment
product sold to them was unsuitable either because it would lead
to financial short-falls, or because the level of risk involved
had not been adequately explained to them prior to the policy commencing.
The sheer scale
and number of complaints has lead to changes in regulations and
the imposition of deadlines for lodging complaints.
"The number
[of complaints] we can expect to receive in the current year will
largely be determined by how financial services firms meet the new
regulatory
requirements on so-called re-projection letters. Most of these letters
will warn of likely mortgage shortfalls and many will give, for
the first time, an explicit
deadline by which any complaint must be lodged.", Walter Merricks,
chief ombudsman. The situation is no better for first-time buyers
either. Forming a significantly important sector of the house buying
market, a recently published study from GMAC,
the financial subsidiary of General Motors, carried out by Professor
David Miles, who was originally commissioned to investigate the
mortgage market by Chancellor Gordon Brown, has found that dramatically
fewer first-time buyers than ever before are currently entering
into the housing market. A report from mortgage lender, Abbey, highlighted
that the main concern for first-time buyers is not a lack of desire
to buy their own house, but rather a fear over whether they feel
they can afford to do so. Just over a third of the potential first-time
buyers in the survey, indicated that they wanted to buy a home within
the next year, however only 5% were confident that they would actually
be able to. These figures are disappointing when viewed against
the backdrop of the initiatives
by Gordon Brown to help first-time buyers, through the increase
in the zero rate stamp duty threshold announced during the budget,
and the introduction of shared ownership schemes with purchasers
owning between 50% and 75% of their home and paying rent on the
remainder. Recent reductions in the cost of loans for first-time
buyers has also occurred, and
many experts believe that the base rate may fall further, creating
a spark for further reductions in the cost of monthly mortgage payments.
These should all be seen as good news, but new buyers still do not
appear to be convinced that now is the right time to buy. “There
are other important influences affecting this group other than the
straight affordability issue”, GMAC’s, executive chairman,
Stephen Knight, reported, “Buying property is seen as ‘settling
down’ among 71% of those questioned….More than half
of the people studied felt comfortable with delaying buying a property
until they are over 30. This matches with the current average age
of a first-time buyer, 34.” Stephen Knight also stated that
an increasing problem for those who go on to higher education is
that, “many graduates, especially those who leave college
with large student debts, are unwilling to take on additional financial
commitments.”
According to
research from Moneynet, first time buyers during May were looking
for an average mortgage amount of £135,966 for an average
property value of £205,284 on an average salary of £39,027.
With the average single UK salary around £24-25k,
current house purchases are therefore generally requiring the combined
funds available from dual incomes, combined with many young families
being worried about job security, Stephen Knight believes there
are clearly social and financial issues that need to be addressed.
The greatest
worry for a quarter of would-be buyers according to the Edinburgh
Solicitors Property Centre is that they feel that if they don’t
get on to the
property ladder soon, they never will.
References:
Moneynet (http://www.moneynet.co.uk/mortgage-research/index.shtml)
Edinburgh Solicitors Property Centre (http://www.espc.co.uk/)
GMAC (http://www.gmacfs.com/)
Sunday Herald (http://www.sundayherald.com)
Released by http://www.bigmouthmedia.com
Web Site = http://www.moneynet.co.uk/
Contact Details
= http://www.moneynet.co.uk
Moneynet
Sussex House
8-10 Homesdale Road
Bromley
Kent
BR2 9LZ
Telephone: 020 8313 9030
Fax: 020 8464 1971
E-mail: INFO@MONEYNET.CO.UK
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