60,000 homeowners a month enter negative equity
The downturn in the property market is forcing 60,000 homeowners a month into negative equity.
According to the credit rating agency, Standard & Poor’s, research suggests that 335,000 homes will be worth less than their mortgages by the end of October, a rise of 260,000 over four months.
If the trend continues, the number of homes with mortgages above their value will exceed the 1.8 million level seen in the 1990′s property slump and economic forecasting agency, Capital Economics, is predicting that two million UK households could be in negative equity by 2010.
In addition, analysts expect repossessions to continue rising.
In the first six months of the year, 19,000 homes were taken back by lenders; the figure is up 40% on the second half of 2007 and is expected to rise to 26,000 in the second half of 2008.
Government ministers are proposing new guidelines for lenders dealing with arrears cases and continue to stress that repossession proceeding should only be used as a last resort.
Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Yvette Cooper, is calling for a more responsible approach as the UK enters a period of economic recession.
However, Northern Rock has come in for strong criticism over its repossession rates in recent days with debt charity, Credit Action, claiming that the nationalised lender’s level of repossessions is twice that of its rivals.
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