CP 19/14: IMLA wants alternative arrangements for mortgage prisoners

In response to the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) consultation paper on Responsible Lending (CP 19/14), the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA) is calling for the regulator to avoid raising borrowers’ expectations unrealistically and provide a clearer picture of the numbers and circumstances of borrowers who need additional support from lenders.

IMLA, whose members are responsible for £230bn of annual lending, has claimed the FCA’s current proposals do not adequately identify what the current cohort of “trapped” borrowers looks like and suggests that the extension of modified affordability criteria may only benefit a minority of those currently not able to switch to cheaper deals.

Other key points IMLA focuses on in its response include:

As part of its request for alternative solutions, IMLA has called on the FCA and Government to revive legislation, originally set out in a 2009 Treasury Consultation paper, that planned to expand the definition of the regulated activity of administering a regulated mortgage contract. This was to be achieved by ensuring that companies which interact with mortgage holders were regulated by the then Financial Services Authority (FSA), including either the purchaser of a mortgage book or third-party administrators. At the time, the Government had identified a negative impact on borrowers regarding the onward sale of mortgage books, but the legislation was dropped in 2013.

The Statement of Practice on the Transfer of Mortgages, published by the Department for Environment in 1989, suggests historical precedence for this alternative support, with the Council of Mortgage Lenders adopting the statement into its Voluntary Mortgage Code until October 2004.

Kate Davies, IMLA’s executive director of the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association, said: “The regulator has put forward clear proposals to address the issue of mortgage prisoners in the UK, which is to be welcomed. However, there remains a great deal of confusion around the number of ‘trapped’ borrowers these changes are likely to help.

“Our industry must therefore be careful not to unrealistically raise the expectations of borrowers. Proposals such as modified affordability assessments will only support a small number of borrowers who find themselves unable to re-mortgage onto better deals.

“IMLA believes that the regulator and Government should consider alternative measures, including advanced legislation that was abandoned in 2013, to improve protections for those who remain unable to switch to a cheaper, more suitable mortgage deal.”

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