Advisers urged to support clients facing repossession

Published on

repossessions

A not for profit community interest company says recently reported regional trends in the repossessions market mirrors its own experiences.

Revival Repossession Solutions is urging intermediaries to become aware of all the support options available to their clients who are facing repossession.

The firm, which recently launched a broker proposition, provides urgently needed advice and instructs legal representation for borrowers facing repossession proceedings in court. Revival has helped over 1000 people stay in their homes over the last two years.

“Recent research broadly reflects what we are seeing in terms of enquiries,” said Luke Memory, Revival Repossession Solutions’s chief executive. “We have many clients from the south of the country who generally have more to protect in terms of equity. It’s far from an exact science but usually when we get a call from a southern client the equity is higher, their earnings are normally higher and conversely their arrears are higher, so the pressure is greater all round. Moreover, if people have a good degree of equity, this could be massively diminished should they get repossessed.

“There is more of a tendency with enquiries from the north for clients to have low or negative equity and to be experiencing significant affordability issues in relation to their mortgage payment. This certainly isn’t the case for all our northern clients, and we see a wide range of cases across all geographies, but it’s more of a trend in the north than the south.”

Memory believes this all means the adviser market needs to prepare itself to support clients who may find themselves in a repossession situation:

He said: “Recently we have seen a real shift in lender attitude towards forbearance. These changes are having a major impact on borrowers. It is clear that many lenders are simply not prepared to consider all the remedies available under PAP (Pre Action Protocol).

“Advisers need to be in a position to direct people to the right information as quickly as possible and understand what options their clients have from organisations such as the CAB, Shelter and Revival.”

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

1 COMMENT

  1. I don't want to make a profit from it, but equally don't want to make a loss.
    Just like the Bank, Solicitors, Court and other professionals involved who are presumably also doing it all out of the goodness of their hearts.
    Is that how it works?

Comments are closed.

Latest articles

Barclays cuts rates and launches sub-4% Premier tracker

Barclays will cut selected mortgage rates from Thursday 30 April and launch a Premier...

Millennials still locked out of homeownership

Only 5% of millennials have reached the life milestones they expected as teenagers, according...

Canada Life makes two executive committee appointments

Canada Life has appointed Rose St Louis as its first chief customer officer and...

The Suffolk brings back five-year residential and buy-to-let fixes

Suffolk Building Society is reintroducing four five-year fixed rate mortgage products after withdrawing them...

iPipeline adds feature badges to SolutionBuilder protection portal

iPipeline has launched Feature Badging on SolutionBuilder, its protection quote and research portal, to...

Latest publication

Other news

Barclays cuts rates and launches sub-4% Premier tracker

Barclays will cut selected mortgage rates from Thursday 30 April and launch a Premier...

Millennials still locked out of homeownership

Only 5% of millennials have reached the life milestones they expected as teenagers, according...

Canada Life makes two executive committee appointments

Canada Life has appointed Rose St Louis as its first chief customer officer and...