Who Can Get A Mortgage Today?
- Date: 2008-04-23 - Word Count: 580
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Almost every edition of lunchtime and evening news headlines on the TV has finance related news these days, the financial markets are plumeting and every month, sometimes every week another bank asks for additional funding. RBS are the latest bank to admit it's after an additional £10 billion from it's shareholders.
The first casualty of the credit crunch both in the USA and UK looks like the mortgaged homeowner. Here in the UK it started with interest rates being cut to try and encourage consumer spending and bolster the economy. Then house prices stalled and are reported to have fallen by a few percent, although they're still up on 12 months ago. Next mortgage products were pulled off the high streets by lenders worried about their lack of funding and losses in the adverse mortgage market. Something like 60 per cent of all mortgages available in the UK were pulled, fixed rate products and 100 per cent mortgages made up the majority of the 60 per cent. This is because most consumers were looking for some certainty and grabbing fixed rates as quickly as possible. The 100 per cent mortgages were pulled because they are too risky an investment for the banks going forward.
Today you're unlikely to get a mortgage unless you have a deposit saved up and if your deposit is less than 5 per cent you might be restricted in your choice of lenders. The thing that really irritates me is that around 8 years ago, when I bought my first property, it was standard practice to have a 5 per cent deposit. OK, I admit 100 per cent mortgages were available and infact the housing company from whom I bought my house offered me a 100 per cent mortgage. However, I knew that a 100 per cent mortgage wasn't the most sensible way to start off on the property ladder and so after following the advice of my parents I saved up a 5 per cent deposit. It's only within the last decade that banks have jumped on the marketing bandwagon and made finance and credit into some sort of superbrand marketplace. People were almost encouraged to use 0 per cent credit cards and low rate loans to basically get what they couldn't normally afford. The rise of the internet over the last decade has also contributed to this and it's made getting finance even easier for everyone; even people who shouldn't be getting more finance and perhaps shouldn't have been approved in the first place.
So mortgage rates are increasing even though the Bank of England has made recent base rate cuts. Lenders are also increasing the upfront fees on mortgages. Even though the cost of getting a mortgage is increasing people shouldn't panic. The fees can be high, sometimes over £1000, but I think that now the banks are insisting on a 5 per cent deposit it's only a good thing. Consumers should be thankfull that this is happening again. If only the banks had continued to insist on a minimum deposit, with every mortgage, over the last 10 years, then maybe some of this could have been avoided? In my opinion, if you cannot afford a 5 per cent deposit then you shouldn't really be thinking about taking out a mortgage. Similarly, if you don't have at least 50 per cent of your monthly take home salary left over after your mortgage payment has been made then perhaps you should consider not going for a mortgage.
The first casualty of the credit crunch both in the USA and UK looks like the mortgaged homeowner. Here in the UK it started with interest rates being cut to try and encourage consumer spending and bolster the economy. Then house prices stalled and are reported to have fallen by a few percent, although they're still up on 12 months ago. Next mortgage products were pulled off the high streets by lenders worried about their lack of funding and losses in the adverse mortgage market. Something like 60 per cent of all mortgages available in the UK were pulled, fixed rate products and 100 per cent mortgages made up the majority of the 60 per cent. This is because most consumers were looking for some certainty and grabbing fixed rates as quickly as possible. The 100 per cent mortgages were pulled because they are too risky an investment for the banks going forward.
Today you're unlikely to get a mortgage unless you have a deposit saved up and if your deposit is less than 5 per cent you might be restricted in your choice of lenders. The thing that really irritates me is that around 8 years ago, when I bought my first property, it was standard practice to have a 5 per cent deposit. OK, I admit 100 per cent mortgages were available and infact the housing company from whom I bought my house offered me a 100 per cent mortgage. However, I knew that a 100 per cent mortgage wasn't the most sensible way to start off on the property ladder and so after following the advice of my parents I saved up a 5 per cent deposit. It's only within the last decade that banks have jumped on the marketing bandwagon and made finance and credit into some sort of superbrand marketplace. People were almost encouraged to use 0 per cent credit cards and low rate loans to basically get what they couldn't normally afford. The rise of the internet over the last decade has also contributed to this and it's made getting finance even easier for everyone; even people who shouldn't be getting more finance and perhaps shouldn't have been approved in the first place.
So mortgage rates are increasing even though the Bank of England has made recent base rate cuts. Lenders are also increasing the upfront fees on mortgages. Even though the cost of getting a mortgage is increasing people shouldn't panic. The fees can be high, sometimes over £1000, but I think that now the banks are insisting on a 5 per cent deposit it's only a good thing. Consumers should be thankfull that this is happening again. If only the banks had continued to insist on a minimum deposit, with every mortgage, over the last 10 years, then maybe some of this could have been avoided? In my opinion, if you cannot afford a 5 per cent deposit then you shouldn't really be thinking about taking out a mortgage. Similarly, if you don't have at least 50 per cent of your monthly take home salary left over after your mortgage payment has been made then perhaps you should consider not going for a mortgage.
Related Tags: mortgage, mortgages, mortgage fees, fixed rate mortgages, compare mortgages, 100 per cent mortgages, compare fixed rate mortgages, mortgage costs
Simon Duffy writes for the Financial Blog a UK Finance Blog talking about all aspects of personal finance including loans blogs, and more. Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles
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