Showing posts with label mortgages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mortgages. Show all posts

Friday, 25 October 2013

89% 'Expect House Prices to Rise'

This article by the Express on October 15th, 2013 reveals that 9 in 10 homeowners confident that house prices to rise to highest level in four years.

Nine in 10 home owners expect house prices to rise in the coming months as market confidence surges to its highest level in at least four years, research has found.

Confidence in the housing market has surged to its highest level in four years research suggests Confidence in the housing market has surged to its highest level in four years, research suggests [PA]
 
Some 89% of more than 9,000 home owners surveyed by property search website Zoopla predict further house price hikes in the next six months, marking the highest proportion seen since its records began in 2009.

Just 4% of home owners across Britain believe prices will drop, down from 17% this time a year ago. People typically expect prices to rise by 5.7% between now and next spring, with London home owners predicting particularly strong growth at 8.3%.

Some 97% of Londoners surveyed expect to see values increase. Separate research by another website, Rightmove, published earlier this week showed that house sellers' asking prices in London have jumped by 10% in the space of just one month to reach a new high of over £544,000.

Two-thirds (66%) of those across the survey who think property prices are on the up said the level of property sales they have already seen in their local area is their main reason for believing this.

Despite home owner confidence remaining higher in the South than the rest of Britain, every region recorded an increase in the proportion of people who think prices in their area are rising. Even in areas of the North and Wales, where confidence was at its lowest, 84% of home owners believe prices are rising.

The West Midlands and Yorkshire and the Humber recorded the biggest jumps in home owner confidence over the last quarter. The proportion of owners predicting price rises has risen from 78% to 90% in the West Midlands, while Yorkshire and the Humber has seen a jump from 72% to 84%.

The low point for home owner confidence recorded by the study was in winter 2010, when just over half (54%) of home owners were expecting price increases.

The Zoopla research was conducted between the end of September and the start of October - just after Prime Minister David Cameron announced that the launch of new phase of the Government's flagship Help to Buy scheme offering state-backed low-deposit mortgages was being brought forward by three months.

Mr Cameron has rejected fears that the UK is heading for a house price bubble, with borrowers being encouraged to over-stretch themselves in a market where the number of houses for sale is in relatively short supply, which is putting an upward pressure on house prices. He has said the market is generally still recovering from a low base.

State-backed lenders Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), NatWest, Halifax and Bank of Scotland all started offering loans to first-time buyers and home-movers with 5% deposits under the new phase of the Help to Buy scheme from this month. Other major lenders including Santander, HSBC and Barclays have confirmed plans to join the scheme at a later date.

Lawrence Hall, spokesman for Zoopla, said the new phase of the Help to Buy should boost confidence further "across the country" and not just in London, which has continued to attract wealthy overseas buyers looking for a safe haven to place their cash.

Office for National Statistics recently showed that even before the new phase of Help to Buy was launched, UK house prices reached a record high of £247,000 in August and the British Bankers' Association (BBA) reported this week that mortgage approvals to home buyers are at a four-year high.

The Government's Funding for Lending scheme, which was launched in 2012 and has given lenders access to cheap finance to help borrowers, has already had a major impact on the housing market, with the choice of mortgages rapidly increasing and lenders dropping their rates to ultra-low levels.

Here is the proportion of home owners predicting house prices will rise over the next six months by region, according to Zoopla:

:: Yorkshire and the Humber, 84%

:: West Midlands, 90%

:: Wales, 84%

:: South-west England, 90%

:: South-east England, 95%

:: Scotland, 85%

:: North-west England, 84%

:: North-east England, 84%

:: London, 97%

:: East of England, 92%

:: East Midlands, 88%

Article Source: http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/439012/89-expect-house-prices-to-rise

Thursday, 10 October 2013

Help To Buy Lending Scheme Launch Sparks Homes Frenzy

This article by Sarah O'Grady of the Express on October 9th, 2013 tells us the launching of the 2nd version of the Help to Buy scheme swept up Britain's housing market in frenzy.

Borrowers leapt on the new Government initiative which will allow them to buy homes with 95 per mortgages and slash average deposit amounts.

As details emerged of the deals available from lenders, David Cameron said the project would unlock the housing market and help young people without rich parents get their own home.

HSBC became the first major bank outside state-backed Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds to announce it was joining the £12billion scheme.

Britain’s biggest mortgage lender Halifax also ann­ounced details of the home loans it would be offering.

Homes valued at up to £600,000 will be eligible with some estimates suggesting 180,000 loans could be taken out – despite fears that the scheme could spark a housing price bubble.

Taxpayers will guarantee up to 15 per cent of a property’s value, in return for a fee charged to lenders, allowing homebuyers to purchase with deposits as low as five per cent.

As the scheme was laun­ched, Mr Cameron visited a three-bedroom show home in Weston Favell, Northampton and met first-time buyers Kayleigh Groom, 28, and her partner Chris Day, 29, from Kettering.

The couple, who have been renting for five years, told him that Help To Buy would enable them to get on the property ladder.

Mr Cameron said: “What we’re doing is making sure that the typical family can buy the typical home.

“The couple I’ve just been with. They’ve both got good jobs. They’ve both got good prospects. They can afford mortgage payments but because they haven’t got a rich mum and dad they can’t get a mortgage. That isn’t fair. That isn’t right.


“So the Help To Buy scheme will help them to get a mortgage and make them homeowners.”

RBS and its NatWest subsidiary said they expect to sign up 25,500 first and next-time buyers over the three-year scheme. The two lenders are extending opening hours at 740 branches to cope with the demand.

Paul Smith, of haart estate agent, predicted Help To Buy will boost property deals by 10-15 per cent in the next 12 months and cut first-time buyers’ average deposit from £33,948 to £7,218.

He said: “We have seen a frenzy of activity with our branches overwhelmed by enquiries in the wake of the launch of Help To Buy.

“We have had the best first week of October for nine years. Last year we had 3,800 buyers registering in that first week, this year it was 7,281 – that’s a staggering 92 per cent increase.”


 

Monday, 26 August 2013

Mortgages Up By Third as Housing Sales Soar

Sarah O'Grady of Express discusses the banks' approved mortgages is third higher compared to last year as the housing market continues to step up according to this article on 24th August, 2013.

The number of mortgages approved by banks is a third higher than a year ago as the housing market revival continues to gather pace.
Some 37,200 approvals for house purchases worth a total of £5.7billion got the green light in July, the British Bankers’ Association reported.

This was only slightly down on a 17-month high of 37,337 the previous month.
The BBA said the “stronger pattern” seen in the mortgage market since the start of the year has continued into the summer.

Mortgage approvals to home buyers are 31 per cent higher than in the same period last year and re-mortgaging approvals are 40 per cent higher.

However, overall mortgage lending remains “subdued” because homeowners are making high repayments on their loans, the BBA said.

Various Government schemes to boost the housing market mean several mortgage lenders have been offering their lowest ever rates.

With poor returns generally on offer on savings, this has made it more attractive for people to use any spare cash to pay down their mortgage debt.

BBA statistics director David Dooks said: ­“Mortgage activity has strengthened during 2013 with the help of Government schemes. But high ­repayments and redemptions mean that we are not seeing increases in net mortgage borrowing for the high street banks.”

Jonathan Harris, director of mortgage broker Anderson Harris, said that despite the uplift in activity, house sales are still far lower than they were at the height of the boom years.

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Fixed-rate Mortgages 'are good value'

This latest article on July 31, 2013 by houseladder.co.uk shows why fixed-rate mortgages are presently good in providing value as suggested by Andy Gray.

Property News - Fixed-rate mortgages 'are good value'

The bottom of the interest cycle is on the horizon, it has been noted.


Fixed-rate mortgages are proving to be particularly good value at present, it has been suggested. 

Andy Gray, managing director of mortgages at Barclays, noted this is because there is a general consensus in the industry that the bottom of the interest rate cycle is on the horizon. 

Mr Gray pointed out this has coincided with a time of the year that is one of the busiest for remortgaging and house buying activity.

The comments come as Barclays has announced improvements to its home loan range in the hope of giving more opportunities to save money for remortgagers and to present a new collection of fee-free deals for those looking to buy a home. 

Mr Gray stated: "The Barclays rate cuts and new offers give even more homeowners and buyers the chance to take advantage of the low rates."
It was recently reported by the Council of Mortgage Lenders that UK gross mortgage lending in June was two per cent greater than in May, rising from £14.7 billion to £15 billion. 

Article Source:  http://www.houseladder.co.uk/Property_News/2013/07/Fixedrate_mortgages_are_good_value_3438.aspx#.UfnhQ40_tZ0