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Mortgages For CCJ Clients required
11 November, 2008
In response to yesterday's comments by Nick Rhodes and
general press coverage, Simon Charles of AR Mortgages
thinks that we are losing sight of what will actually get
the housing market moving again. He says:
"I have just read the article from Nick Rhodes and can't
help but feel that all of these so called industry experts are
missing the criticial point about the mortgage market.
It seems that all the rhetoric is about rate reduction and
banks being put under pressure to reduce the rates so that
people can afford mortgages. This is, of course, beneficial to
massage the housing / mortgage market and make it appealing
again however the larger underlying issue is the willingness of
lenders to allow people to borrow, almost irrespective of
price.
As a broker I could sell the rates available as at today -
in my opinion they aren't that bad when you consider rates
around 10-15% not more than 15-16 years ago - what is getting
increasingly difficult is getting the lending. I don't have a
large adverse client base or clients with high LTVs and
sometimes seem to be struggling to get deals through mainstream
lenders with people who have minor or sometimes no damage to
their credit profiles.
Most recently HBOS group, Lloyds TSB Group, RBS group and
Barclays have all tightened there lending criteria or credit
scoring to such an extent that even those with a good credit
score are failing on automated solutions. When cases are thrown
in front of underwriters they are looking at them from a very
blinkered "black & white" view point. Only Abbey seems to
offer a little bit of credible lending acumen by looking at the
whole scenario.
As such this means that when a lender releases a new lower
rate it creates good PR for them but offers very little to
the public, who in the cases of some institutions above,
are supplementing their ability to trade at all in the form
of government hand outs created by taxing the public in the
first place. I was previously a mortgage underwriter for a
large lender, in the mid nineties not the boom time of the
last 6 years, and we were taught "look to lend", only
decline if there is a good reason to decline e.g. large
unsatisfied CCJ's, recent defaults on multiple agreements,
bankruptcy, IVA's etc.
As brokers I think more needs to be done to lobby lenders to
get back to sensible but also realisitc lending. From the
lenders I have spoken to most appear to be well under the 6%
recognised acceptable arrears rate and yet they want to protect
their book further by not taking on board debtors they
previously welcomed with open arms (most of whom have
maintained payments on credit over the past few years).
I understand the banks now need to consolidate and repair
their balance sheets but how are they allowed to get away with
this at the expense of the general public who support them
through deposits and borrowing and now goverment lending?
Sorry to rant but I read most of the articles from both
yourselves and other trade press and all I hear is "cut rates"
when really what I believe we need to be saying is "cut people
some slack" by not tarring us (general mortgage customers) with
the incompetence of the Americans and their lending
practices.
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