Application-offer conversions at three-year high

Published on

The Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA) has reported that mortgage brokers saw more loan applications convert into offers in the first three months of 2019 than at any time during the last three years.

IMLA’s latest Mortgage Market Tracker showed that brokers were able to convert more than 89% of applications into offers, the highest percentage recorded since the IMLA index began in Q1 2016. This was an increase of almost one percentage point on Q4 2018’s numbers, and two percentage points annually. This was up from 76% in Q1 2016, before the EU Referendum took place.

The share of buy-to-let and specialist loan applications that led to offers both showed a marked improvement. The tracker found that 89% of buy-to-let applications resulted in an offer, while 91% of specialist applications did the same to reach a three-year high for that part of the market.

Mortgage brokers reported a healthy flow of specialist mortgages in Q1 2019 (i.e. loans outside of mover, remortgage, first-time buyer and buy-to-let products). When asked, brokers revealed that the amount of specialist mortgage applications leading to an offer – and also those offers that led to a completion – were all at three-year highs.

The number of completions (56%) for every 100 specialist loan DIPs was up 19 percentage points on Q1 2018’s results (37%).

The Mortgage Market Tracker also found that the amount of accepted DIPs that go on to full mortgage application have increased significantly on last year.

Overall, accepted DIPs to full applications rose by eight percentage points between Q1 2018 and 2019 (from 76% to 84%), with this measure rising by almost 13 percentage points for first-time buyer loans (from 72% to 84%) and nearly 11 percentage points for specialist loans (from 73% to 83%).

Despite brokers’ continued ability to successfully place mortgage business for borrowers, the Mortgage Market Tracker found that intermediary confidence continues to dip as brokers wait on Westminster to deliver an update on the UK’s Brexit plans.

The percentage of brokers who professed to be “very confident” about their own business prospects continued to drop slightly to 53% in Q1 2019 from a high of 69% in Q4 2016, while those who only feel “fairly confident” rose to 45% from 30% over the same period. Quarterly figures remained steady, indicating Brexit fears are not intensifying as Westminster continues to debate the divorce proceedings.

The quarterly IMLA tracker – which uses data from BVA BDRC – examines consumers’ success rate in securing a mortgage via the intermediary channel, by tracking their progress from initial expression of interest (seeking a ‘decision in principle’) through to completion. In doing so, it compares the fortunes of first-time buyers, home movers, remortgagors, buy-to-let borrowers and applicants for specialist loans.

Kate Davies, executive director of IMLA, said: “In its recent Mortgages Market Study, the FCA noted that the mortgage market is working well for a large majority of people in the UK – and these tracker results underline that.

“The share of loan applications that brokers are able to turn into offers for customers is at a three-year high, supporting the view that intermediaries are doing an effective job for significant numbers of homebuyers and other mortgage customers.

“It’s also encouraging to see the growth of successful specialist mortgage applications. Borrowers who were once perhaps labelled as ‘non-prime’ have struggled to secure funding since the financial crisis. But the need for quality specialist products has not abated in the last decade, so it’s good to see that brokers and lenders are finding ways to secure more loans for these niche borrowers.

“The mortgage market is not immune from the current Brexit chaos – but it’s keeping calm and getting on with the business of helping people finance their home purchases. High quality advice will always be important – whatever the state of the economy and the political climate.”

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.

Latest articles

Ortus supports £25m redevelopment of landmark Cotswolds hotel

Ortus Secured Finance has provided a structured senior debt facility to refinance and redevelop...

Buy-to-let lending sees strongest revival since mini-budget, says UK Finance

Buy-to-let mortgage lending surged in the first quarter of 2025, reaching levels not seen...

YBS Commercial raises BTL procuration fees and trims rates

YBS Commercial Mortgages has increased its buy-to-let procuration fee and made modest rate cuts...

Gen H the latest lender to lift loan-to-income caps

Gen H has announced a series of significant changes to its loan-to-income (LTI) policy...

Afin Bank officially enters UK mortgage market with underserved borrower focus

Afin Bank has launched a range of residential and buy-to-let products aimed at some...

Latest opinions

Why the mortgage industry must digitise for the customer, not just for compliance

Home buyers today can manage their finances, verify their ID and even order a...

The BBC’s exposé isn’t news to mortgage advisers – but it might be to the public

Let’s be honest, for mortgage advisers, the recent Panorama investigation into conditional selling by...

Rachel Reeves rolls back mortgage rules: return to risk or reasonable reform?

Rachel Reeves is to roll back bureaucratic red tape introduced since the 2008 financial...

Reeves’ reforms are a welcome boost but the housing market must modernise

Rachel Reeves’ announcement marks a clear shift in housing policy, with measures that could...

Other news

Ortus supports £25m redevelopment of landmark Cotswolds hotel

Ortus Secured Finance has provided a structured senior debt facility to refinance and redevelop...

Don’t build in fear – quality must come before quotas

“This is my message to housebuilders: get on with it. If you promise homes,...

Buy-to-let lending sees strongest revival since mini-budget, says UK Finance

Buy-to-let mortgage lending surged in the first quarter of 2025, reaching levels not seen...