Posts Tagged ‘Homepage’

Ulster Bank promises £500m for mortgages

Posted: May 6th, 2009

ulster-bankThe Ulster Bank, whose parent company is the Royal Bank of Scotland has announced that it will make 500m available for mortgages between now and the year end.  The bank will be launching a total of 22 new mortgage products with immediate effect.

The Ulster Bank’s head of products, Derek Wilson, said that ” Our mortgage applications in general have increased by 70% since February, with the number of mortgage offers made by us in April close to April 2007 levels.

The Royal Bank of Scotland was one of a few who received a government bailout last year and have since been criticised for freezing lending.  Mr Wilson hopes that this announcement will “shatter the myth” that getting a mortgage is next to impossible.

The new mortgage products will be available to first time buyers, those moving house and those wishing to switch lender, rates will start from 3.09% and will be available at up to 90% of the properties value.

Consumer confidence up!

Posted: May 6th, 2009

nationwideNationwide’s consumer confidence survey recorded the biggest single upturn in nearly two years, as the overall Index rose from 42 points in March to 50 in April.

For full details of the survey, please follow the link below:-

Nationwide Consumer Confidence Index

Help for homeowners.

Posted: April 23rd, 2009

shutterstock_16716514The government has brought in several new schemes to help those struggling with mortgage repayments.

The latest one, starting on 21 April 2009, allows some home owners who suffer a sharp drop in income to defer up to 70% of their mortgage interest payments, for up to two years.

The Homeowners Mortgage Support Scheme (HMSS) is being supported mainly by lenders in which the government has a big or controlling stake.  But most of the other lenders say they will follow this lead anyway with their own borrowers who are in trouble.

People made redundant or who face a significant loss of income will be allowed to defer a proportion of interest payments for up to two years.

They will still have to pay back that money eventually, though.  This could help families with one earner who has become redundant, a homeowner who has suffered a significant loss of overtime, or people who have had to take a lower-paid job.  The main limit is a mortgage no larger than £400,000, and savings of no more than £16,000.

The deferred payments will be added on to repayments for the rest of the term, ideally when people are able to find a new job.  The Treasury will underwrite the extra risk taken by lenders.  That means if someone eventually defaults, the government will pay the lender 80% of the missed interest payments.

This plan is in addition to the two other main schemes.  One gives more more income support than before to unemployed homeowners with mortgage interest payments to pay.

And the other, called a mortgage rescue scheme, lets some homeowners who are threatened with repossession be converted into housing association tenants, while staying in their homes.

House sales up 40% in March.

Posted: April 22nd, 2009

 

shutterstock_535749The number of homes sold in the UK jumped by 40% in March from the previous month, according to figures from HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC).

There were 60,000 property sales worth at least £40,000 each, compared with 43,000 in February.

The figures suggest that the slump in home sales seen in the past 18 months may be coming to an end.

Even when the figures are adjusted for seasonal trends, they still show a rise from 54,000 to 61,000, a jump of 13%.

The data is in line with other figures from the Bank of England, which showed that mortgage approvals rose significantly in February after stagnating for six months.

And surveyors have reported a steady rise in the number of enquiries at estate agents from potential home buyers during the past five months.

But mortgage lenders warned that a strong revival in the market soon was unlikely.

House prices – less than 10% to fall.

Posted: April 17th, 2009

 

shutterstock_16065607The last month has seen the first real encouraging data on the housing market for quite some time, says a report from the centre for economics and business research (cebr).

Both the Halifax and Nationwide price indices have recently seen their first monthly rises since the end of 2007, and mortgage approvals rose to 37,000 in February.

According to the cebr, if mortgage approvals rise to between 60-70,000 per month, this could be enough to offset the impact of “meagre wage settlements and rapidly rising unemployment that will continue to unfold over the course of the year”.

This, they say, could lead to house prices bottoming out by the third quarter of the year.

However, the cebr also say that a more likely scenario is that mortgage approvals will only reach around 50,000 per month by late summer.

Even in these circumstances, though, the cebr’s forecasting models suggest that prices will only fall by a further eight to ten per cent, and are likely to bottom out by the start of 2010.