This is the first time that purchasers’ income has averaged more than £40,000 since January 2009 when MAB first began collecting this data. June’s average of £40,510 was 2% higher than in May when it was £39,648 and 9% higher than June last year when it was £37,164.
Using data from more than 500 brokers and 800 estate agents, the National Mortgage Index also shows that purchase prices grew by 1.4% in the month and by 4.5% since June 2012 to £224,450.
The MAB said that affordability has improved gradually over the last year as a result of prices growing at a slower rate than incomes. However, home buyers’ average income has grown significant more, by 9%, than annual inflation at 2.7% or average weekly earnings at 3.7%, suggesting that more affluent borrowers are driving up the average as they take advantage of the housing market recovery.
This trend has been especially visible across Greater London, the South West, the Midlands and the North where home buyers’ typical incomes have risen by 10% or more since June 2012. Only three regions, the South East, East Anglia and Wales, saw average incomes fall.
Growing interest in the property market contributed to a 31% increase in the volume of purchase applications between the first and second quarters of 2013. Despite a 2% drop between May and June, quarterly purchase applications were up by 58% compared with the second quarter of 2012.
June also witnessed the highest volume of remortgage applications since the financial crisis, some 6% more than in May and 83% up on June 2012. Remortgage loan to values (LTVs) have shifted noticeably in the last year with the typical application now involving 5% less equity at 59.6% LTV in June 2013 compared with 54.6% LTV in June 2012.
Competition continued to drive up product numbers in June with a 2% increase pushing this average ever closer to the 10,000 marker. At 9,887 the average number of products was the highest since November 2011.
Average fixed rates fell once more in June: apart from a solitary rise of 0.06% in the average three year fixed rate between June 2012 and July 2012, average two, three and five year rates have either held firm or fallen every month for the last year.
The average three year rate fell by 0.07% to 4.06% from May to June while average two and five year rates each fell by 0.08% to 3.74% and 3.88% respectively. June’s average five year rate was 1.02% lower than a year ago with the average two year rate 0.98% lower and three year rate 0.90% lower.
For anyone taking out a £150,000 mortgage over a 25 year term, the rate changes over the last year equate to a saving of £3,412 over the lifetime of a two year fixed deal, £4,625 for a three year deal and £8,493 for a five year deal.
‘June’s figures suggest that the first part of the jigsaw is firmly in place as far as a housing market recovery is concerned. The first instalment of Help To Buy has whetted the appetite for property and sent buyers swarming to their nearest estate agent to see what’s on offer,’ said Brian Murphy, head of lending at Mortgage Advice Bureau.
‘Having almost 7,000 reservations under his belt will give chancellor George Osborne confidence when he steps up to play his next card and reveal the details of the mortgage guarantee scheme. It’s a crucial move that will open up the market to less affluent buyers if he gets it right and if confidence spreads to the construction sector,’ he explained.
‘Reports that fixed mortgage rates will start to rise are turning out to be premature; in fact, I’d bet my house on further reductions over the summer,’ he added.