Mortgage approvals slip in July

The number of mortgage approvals for house purchase fell 1.8% in July to 65,356 (66,582 in June), slipping from an upward trajectory that has persisted for the previous eight months.

Related topics:  Property
Rozi Jones
18th August 2015
Red House

According to the latest Mortgage Monitor from e.surv, on an annual basis there were 0.2% fewer approvals, down from 65,517 in July 2014. This is the first year-on-year fall since March 2015.
 
This fall comes as one member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee voted to raise the base rate from its current historic low of 0.5% – and as warnings of an encroaching increase continue.
 
Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyors, commented:

“The Bank of England has been beating the drum over a base rate rise that has yet to appear. Their hawkish rhetoric has had a knock-on effect on the mortgage market, with some banks beginning to withdraw their lowest-interest mortgage deals. In turn, this appears to have dampened demand for house purchase lending in the short-term, whilst stimulating remortgage activity.
 
“However, the mortgage market should be resilient in the face of this threat. Reforms like MMR introduced since the recession have left us with a market built to ride out storms. Any increase to the base rate is likely to be slow and steady. The Bank of England have as much reason as anyone to be careful about rocking the boat. With incomes rising and inflation staying low, many borrowers have been making hay while the sun shines and paying down their mortgages, while others have been taking the very sensible decision to lock in to low rates.
 
“For now, it’s a waiting game – but it is reassuring to see that this level of uncertainty has had a limited impact on the number of approvals. What we see here are banked coals, not fading embers.”

July has also seen a fall in the number of small-deposit borrowers (with a deposit worth 15% or less of their properties’ total value) in absolute terms and alongside a drop in their proportion of all house purchase mortgage approvals.
 
There were 10,588 small-deposit house purchase loan approvals in July, down 5.9% compared to the 11,252 recorded in June and a 7.1% fall on an annual basis from 11,400 recorded approvals in July 2014.
 
Small-deposit borrowers made up 16.2% of all house purchase approvals this July, falling back from 16.9% in June 2015 and 17.4% in July 2014.

On a regional basis, lending to borrowers with deposits dropped by a larger amount in the East of England and Scotland. The East of England has seen a sharp series of increases in property prices that has started to exclude some borrowers with smaller deposits, as the proportion of small-deposit lending in the area fell to 14% of all house purchase mortgage approvals, down from 16% in June.
 
The proportion of small-deposit borrowers has taken a similar-sized fall north of the border, with just 9% of all Scottish house purchase mortgage approvals in June going to borrowers with small deposits, down two percentage points from 11% in June 2015.
 
Richard Sexton explained:

“Smaller-deposit borrowers – typically first-time buyers – tend to be more vulnerable to change than other mortgage holders. Consequently, we have seen some slowdown in this sector. But they still remain a significant proportion of the total house purchase mortgage market, even with some understandable nervousness over the prospect of a rate rise.
 
“Though some of the ‘ultra-low’ fixed rate repayment plans are being reeled in, there is still a wide range of cheap deals on offer. Stiff competition between lenders has broken a lot of new ground in terms of low rates. We shouldn’t be overly concerned by the very cheapest offers being reined in – there is still a wealth of deals and schemes that are helping borrowers with small deposits get onto the property ladder. The real heart of the issue has always been a shortage of supply. This tension at the bottom of the market will persist until more homes are built and made available to first-time buyers.
 
“The falling proportion of lending to borrowers with smaller deposits in the East of England shows that borrowers across the country need support. Property price inflation has started to nip at the heels of smaller-deposit lending in the East, further emphasising the importance of the Help to Buy scheme, which is helping many borrowers put together enough of a deposit to get on the housing ladder, even as prices climb.”

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