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MMR triggers homebuying slowdown

by Kevin Rose
12 June 2014
The Monmouthshire selects e.surv
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House purchase lending has fallen to an 11-month low, as demand slows among home-movers, according to the latest Mortgage Monitor from e.surv.

There were 61,202 house purchase approvals in May 2014, 3% lower than in April and the lowest number since 59,260 in June 2013, after house purchase lending fell for the fourth consecutive month in May.

Since the start of the year, house purchase approvals have fallen 19%, with 14,600 fewer loans in May than in January 2014. However, on an annual basis, May saw a marginal increase in lending, with only 4% more house purchase approvals than in May 2013, when there were 59,075.

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Richard Sexton (pictured), director of e.surv chartered surveyors, said: “The mortgage market is losing some steam and undergoing a gentle cooling, as demand begins to simmer among homeowners. Uncertainty is one factor affecting home-movers. Some buyers are waiting to see if the market will begin to plateau before agreeing to pay the high price tag on new property. And that’s before adding in other moving expenses such as stamp duty.

“MMR triggered the beginning of the slowdown. It took time to integrate the rigorous financial tests into the mortgage application process, and to train staff in the new procedures. But as MMR becomes further bedded down into the lending process, it is having less of an impact. The continued slowdown comes off the back of falling demand among buyers further up the ladder – some of whom now see the home-buying process as too costly. This is not a cause for concern and the figures do not support recent media hype regarding a property bubble.”

First-time buyer lending continued to pick up pace, despite the overall decline in house purchase approvals. There were 9,670 loans to borrowers with a deposit worth 15% or less of the total value of their property in May 2014, 3% more than in April (9,375) and 40% higher than a year before (6,912).

The number of first-time buyers rose 47% year-on-year in April aided by Help to Buy, according to the latest First Time Buyer Opinion Barometer from LSL Property Services.

At the same time, fewer home-owners with equity already built into property are choosing to move. There were 17,086 loans to borrowers with a deposit of at least 40% of the total value of their property in May 2014, 6% fewer than in April and 8% fewer than in May 2013.

Sexton said: “Despite MMR, home loans are still accessible to first-time buyers. Demand isn’t letting up at the bottom of the market, as first-time buyers still have an unwavering appetite to own their own property.

“But the wind may be changing in the mortgage market. Last week, RBS became the second lender to impose additional restrictions on high LTV mortgages – which are typically the mainstay of first-time buyers. The extra measures are designed to reduce the fever in the market, but they may have some negative side-effects. While MMR demands individual investigation into each home-loan application, income multiple methods are a simplistic way of testing borrowers, and may rule out many deserving aspiring home-owners.”

E.surv believes Help to Buy is not the catalyst behind the heat in the London property market. Statistics released by the Treasury on Help to Buy 2 – the Mortgage Guarantee Scheme – show just 5% of mortgages completed under the scheme since its launch in October 2013, were in London.

Overall, the capital is home to a far slimmer proportion of high LTV borrowers than the rest of the country. Only one in 20 home loans (5%) in the capital were to borrowers with a deposit of 15% or less of the total value of their property in May, compared to over a quarter of all home loans in Yorkshire (27%), the North West (25%) and the North East and Cumbria (25%).

Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyors, explains: “Help to Buy isn’t the engine behind price-rises in the capital, where it has contributed to less than one in a hundred mortgage-funded house sales. London’s market is being fuelled by demand from foreign investors and buy-to-let landlords looking to expand their portfolios, not just first-time buyers. Migration from workers taking advantage of the recovering local economy and accompanying job opportunities is adding further pressure on the housing market.

“The lure of London continues to attract workers, all of whom need somewhere to live. In fact, the ONS predict London’s population to top 10 million in the next 15 years. We need new homes now to help alleviate the strain on those looking to buy in the capital, and to prevent the problem growing as London’s population booms. We must act now by easing planning regulation, freeing up more land, and stimulating a large scale revival of building in and around London – or face a future property market short of accommodation. Axing Help to Buy would generate publicity, but it wouldn’t solve the real problem which is embedded far deeper into the fabric of the capital.”

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