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Home arrow All News arrow Repossessions soar by 12%
Repossessions soar by 12% Print E-mail
21 November 2008

eviction.jpgThe number of homes being repossessed by mortgage lenders has soared by 12% to 11,300 in the last three months, latest figures show.

 

Data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders shows that the number of borrowers who have fallen into arrears also went up during the third quarter of the year compared with the previous quarter, by 8% to 168,000.

 

The CML says that 1.44% of mortgages were at least three months in arrears, up from 1.33% at the end of June. to 168,000, 8% higher than the 155,600 at the end of June. This means that the total for the year will almost certainly exceed the earlier forecast of 170,000.

 

Buy-to-let lending, in the past a sector that has performed better than other sectors in terms of payment profile, has worsened more rapidly than the market as a whole. Reasons include falling rents and an over-supply of rental property in some areas, resulting in some landlords being unable to let their property or achieve high enough rents to support their borrowing commitments. Fraud is also likely to have been a contributory factor. In addition, in line with the rest of the market, it is more difficult to sell as an exit strategy, while the availability of new buy-to-let mortgage finance has contracted and criteria have tightened.

 

At the end of September, 1.58% of buy-to-let loans were in arrears (up from 1.10% at the end of June), compared with 1.44% of all mortgages. The number of buy-to-let mortgages taken into possession in the third quarter was 900, the same as in the first and second quarters of the year, representing 0.08% of all buy-to-let mortgages (compared with 0.1% across the mortgage market as a whole). On the basis of the arrears experience, it seems this lower repossession rate in the buy-to-let sector is unlikely to be maintained looking ahead.

 

However, a range of factors will affect the number of buy-to-let repossessions, including the extent to which buy-to-let lenders appoint receivers of rent as an alternative to repossession. This may be a preferable strategy in many cases where tenants are paying their rent but the landlord is not paying the mortgage.

 

Michael Coogan, CML director general,  said: "The CML and lenders are absolutely committed to ensuring that repossession is only ever a last resort. Most borrowers who face payment problems successfully keep their home by working with their lender - anyone worried about mortgage payments should contact their lender at the earliest opportunity, before arrears start to build up.

 

"The government has taken some helpful steps towards targeted support for some of the most vulnerable households, but with a worsening economy now needs to make it a priority to go further.  Increased help with housing costs is needed for a wider range of borrowers facing unforeseen repayment difficulties where there would otherwise be little prospect of early improvement. Next week's pre-Budget report should concentrate on making much more assistance with mortgage payments available for people whose income is reduced, as help is currently far too limited.

 

"Looking ahead, conditions in the wider economy suggest a worsening picture for mortgage arrears, however carefully lenders handle their treatment of borrowers in difficulty. But while lenders cannot change the underlying causes of financial difficulty, such as unemployment, they can make sure that their response to borrowers is constructive and seeks to avoid repossession wherever other solutions can be found.

 

"That is what lenders are doing, meaning that the number of repossessions is likely to be contained to the levels we forecast at the beginning of the year, despite the worsening in economic and funding conditions through the year. We and our members are continuing to look at every possible way of minimising repossessions, consistent with considerations of the borrower's financial prospects."




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