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First time buyer mortgages rise in the UK says CML

Lending to home movers also increased, contributing to a jump in house purchase lending. Remortgage lending, while still relatively modest, reached its highest level in six months.

The data shows that a total of 20,000 loans were advanced to first time buyers in October, a rise of 14% compared to last month and up by 19% compared to this time last year. In total, loans to first time buyers were worth £2.5 billion in October, up on the £2.2 billion in September and the £2.1 billion advanced at the same time last year.

At 80%, the average loan to value (LTV) ratio was unchanged in October compared to August and September. It means that this figure has essentially remained static for the last two years.

First time buyers continued to favour properties priced between £125,000 and £250,000 in October, with 49% buying properties in this band. The percentage of income consumed by initial mortgage interest and capital repayments was unchanged at 20.0%, remaining more favourable than in 2007 when total capital and interest payments typically consumed closer to 25% of first time buyer income.

Overall loans to first time buyers accounted for 40% of all house purchase loans in October for the second consecutive month.
Although not matching the same rate of growth as first time buyers, lending to home movers increased in October. A total of 29,400 loans were advanced to home movers, worth £4.8 billion, a rise of 13% compared to September and up by 5% on the same period last year.

After three consecutive months at 69%, the LTV ratio for home movers ticked back up to 70% in October. On the back of the rise in lending to first time buyers and home movers, loans for house purchase returned to the underlying upward trend seen earlier in the year.

A total of 49,500 house purchase loans were advanced in October, up from 43,500 loans in September and 44,900 loans in October last year. This represented a 14% increase compared to last month and a 10% rise on October last year.

By value, house purchase loans totalled £7.3 billion in October, up by 11% on September and the same period last year. Following weakness in remortgage activity for most of the year, remortgage lending increased for the second consecutive month in October.

Remortgage lending totalled £3.5 billion in October, up from £3.2 billion in September but remains low compared to historical levels and was 10.3% lower than October last year’s amount of £3.9 billion.

The CML said that the small up tick in remortgage lending suggests that the Funding for Lending scheme may be starting to have an early effect on remortgage lending, after subdued activity early in the year. The scheme has the potential to boost remortgage lending activity more quickly than house purchase due to the longer lag time in buying a property.

‘More positive figures in October, after a slow September, suggest that the underlying trend in house purchase lending of modest year on year growth will continue. However, usual seasonal factors may act as a counter to lending levels in the coming months,’ said CML director general Paul Smee.

‘An up tick in remortgage lending may be an early sign of a small positive impact of the Funding for Lending scheme, but it’s still too soon to evaluate the effects of the scheme. If the incremental improvements in house purchase lending that we are currently seeing persist as we expect them to, then next year should feel a more stable and positive year in the housing and mortgage markets,’ he added.

 

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