Mortgage lending down as home owners focus on repayment
The British Bankers’ Association (BBA) has reported that gross mortgage lending amounted to £8.7 billion in March, with the figure 0.4% down on a year earlier and below the average of the previous six months (£9.2 billion).
According to the BBA, repayments were stronger than usual as lenders actively encouraged borrowers to use surplus cash to reduce their borrowing.
As a consequence, net mortgage lending (gross lending with repayments and redemptions stripped out) grew by only £2.4 billion in March, compared with £2.7 billion in February, and also trailed behind the previous six month average.
With the effects of the year-end change to stamp duty having worked their way through, house purchase approvals were an encouraging 20% up on March 2009 and the average value of a house purchase loan approval stood at £146,100 or 11.8% higher than a year earlier.
Numbers of remortgaging and equity withdrawal approvals continue to be lower than a year earlier.
Commenting on the figures, BBA statistics director, David Dooks, says: “Low interest rates continue to influence customer behaviour”.
He explains: “Homeowners are reducing mortgage debt by making, or maintaining, higher repayments using the extra cash generated by lower mortgage rates.”
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