Mortgage arrears still at 20-year low

Published on

The Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) has reported that the overall arrears rate in the third quarter was the same as in the second quarter, with 0.84% of all mortgages recording arrears equivalent to more than 2.5% of the mortgage balance.

This continues to represent the lowest arrears rate for over 20 years.

The overall repossession rate also remained the same in the third quarter as the second quarter, at 0.02%, representing 1,900 mortgages (of which 1,300 were owner-occupier, 600 buy-to-let).

Although the arrears rate was static, the number of mortgages in arrears rose slightly in the third quarter of 2016 to 93,300, up from 92,500 in the previous quarter, in line with a rise in the estimated total number of outstanding mortgages (up from 11,058,000 to 11,108,000) driven mostly by a rise in the number of outstanding buy-to-let mortgages but also a modest rise in home-owner mortgages.

Within the total of all mortgages in arrears, there was also a shift in the distribution of cases, with the number of cases of lower level arrears continuing to fall, but the heaviest band of 10% or more rising. It is likely that this reflects continuing distortions in the timing of instigating possession actions in the wake of court and regulatory activity (in line with the FCA’s recent review).

As a result, the decline in the arrears rate among home-owners in the 2.5-5% band from 0.43% to 0.42% (39,600 cases to 39,000 cases) was offset by the rise in the >10% band from 0.25% to 0.26% (22,800 cases to 24,000 cases).

Paul Smee, CML director general, said: “The latest arrears and repossession data still paints a reassuring picture of a market in which financial difficulties are relatively rare, and repossession rarer still. However, there is no denying that economic uncertainty for households is increasing. We would strongly urge all mortgage holders to consider whether there are ways that they can plan ahead for possible changes in the future – whether this relates to employment prospects, mortgage payments, or other spending.

“Mortgage lenders are fully committed to ensuring that any home-owner who faces temporary financial difficulty gets help, as far as reasonably possible, to resolve it and to remain in their home. This will continue, whatever the economic climate. But the rise in the more serious arrears category perhaps suggests that we should not be entirely surprised if the number of mortgage repossessions rises a little in future reporting periods.”

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

The conveyancing power of sales-ready packs

Conveyancing is stressful – and I'm not just talking about the poor customer experience....

Cloud is not about where you host technology, it’s about how

When lenders talk about cloud, the discussion often begins – quite reasonably – with...

Property chains adding £2k to moves

Property chains are adding more than £2,000 to the average cost of moving with...

The Bath adopts AI verification in push to streamline mortgage processing

Bath Building Society has partnered with fintech Sikoia to automate document handling, income verification...

FCA moves to simplify UK securitisation regime in joint reform with PRA

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published Consultation Paper CP26/6, setting out proposed changes...

Latest publication

Other news

The conveyancing power of sales-ready packs

Conveyancing is stressful – and I'm not just talking about the poor customer experience....

Cloud is not about where you host technology, it’s about how

When lenders talk about cloud, the discussion often begins – quite reasonably – with...

Property chains adding £2k to moves

Property chains are adding more than £2,000 to the average cost of moving with...