17
Aug
Fewer properties repossessed.....
The number of homes repossessed by mortgage lenders fell again
in the second quarter of the year.
Lenders seized 9,400 properties in April, May and June, 400 fewer
than in the first quarter of 2010, according to the Council of
Mortgage Lenders (CML).
Repossessions have now fallen for three quarters in a row since
they reached a peak of 12,100 last September.
The number of mortgages in arrears also fell, dropping 5% during
the quarter to stand at 178,200 at the end of June.
However, the CML's director general, Michael Coogan, said the
situation was "far from a healthy all-clear".
Finely-balanced arrears cases are the ones who may be at most risk
of tipping into repossession ”
End Quote Council of Mortgage Lenders
"Mortgage difficulties have so far been contained at lower levels
than we expected at the start of the year, and by comparison to the
1990s recession," he said.
"However, the safety net for borrowers is weakened by the prospect
of higher interest rates, a possible rise in unemployment, [and]
reduced government support for mortgage payments."
The CML said it now expected only 39,000 homes to be repossessed
this year, down from its previous forecast of 53,000.
That expectation is supported by evidence from the courts in
England and Wales where the number of attempts by lenders to seize
the homes of defaulting borrowers has fallen again.
In the second quarter of the year the number of possession claims
launched by lenders fell by 5% to 17,774, statistics from the
Ministry of Justice show.
Apart from a brief rise in the second quarter of 2009, the number
of claims has been on a downward trend since the start of 2008,
when they reached a peak of nearly 40,000 in the first quarter of
the year.
The number of claims that were then granted by the court also fell,
down by 7% from the first quarter of the year to 13,389.
That too was far lower than the peak number of more than 28,000,
recorded in the last quarter of 2008.
A housing market recovery may lead to an increase in the number of
repossessions as lenders enforce suspended possession orders after
previous leniency”
End Quote Malcolm Hurlston Consumer Credit Counselling
Service
Nearly half of all orders still end up being suspended by the
courts, typically to give the home owner time to pay.
The CML explained that despite the apparent improvement in arrears
and repossessions, some people with high arrears were still
perilously close to losing their homes.
The proportion of all mortgages with the lowest levels of arrears -
where payments are behind by between 1.5% and 2.5% of the
outstanding loan - has fallen to 0.7%, or 80,100.
But the proportion of mortgage holders with very high levels of
arrears - amounting to more than 10% of the outstanding loan - is
still stuck at 26,400, or 0.23% of all mortgage holders.
"There is still a significant segment of borrowers whose arrears
may have been stabilised through lender forbearance or other
support, but whose situation is not improving enough to enable them
to claw their way out of problems," the CML said.
"These finely-balanced arrears cases are the ones who may be at
most risk of tipping into repossession if there are negative
changes such as higher interest rates or reduced benefit support,"
it warned.
The Consumer Credit Counselling Service (CCCS) warned that
repossessions were likely to rise in the coming year.
"A housing market recovery may lead to an increase in the number of
repossessions as lenders enforce suspended possession orders after
previous leniency," warned Malcolm Hurlston, CCCS chairman.
"This situation is likely to be aggravated in October when support
for mortgage interest payments for those who have lost their jobs
are halved from 6.08% to 3.09%, to match the Bank of England's
average mortgage rate."