Source Insurance joins Next Intelligence panel

Published on

Source Insurance is joining the Directly Authorised (DA) mortgage panel of Next Intelligence.

The news follows the introduction of Source Insurance to the Mortgage Intelligence proposition.

Lee Denton, the Source’s national sales manager, said: “Everyone at Source is very excited about having the opportunity to work with the Next intelligence members.

“Our true panel offering is proving a huge success and demonstrates the real value Source can add. It can really complement and complete a broker’s GI proposition by offering choice and a large range of every day and non-standard products all online.

“We are looking forward to helping members increase their GI conversion.”

Sally Laker (pictured), managing director at Mortgage Intelligence, added: “We’re delighted to have introduced Source Insurance to our Directly Authorised members, a partnership which supports our ambition of helping advisers to provide a complete holistic service to their clients and future-proof their business.”

Latest POLL

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

Bank of England expected to hold interest rates at 4.5% amid economic uncertainty

The Bank of England is widely expected to maintain interest rates at 4.5% when...

£6.5k bill for homebuyers who miss stamp duty deadline

Rent and mortgage spending rose 7.7% year-on-year in February, as more homeowners moved from...

Advice Guru partners with Pure Retirement to support broker education

Financial adviser learning platform Advice Guru has announced a new sponsorship partnership with Pure...

Nationwide ups LTV limits for interest-only and foreign national borrowers

Nationwide has announced changes to its mortgage lending criteria, increasing the maximum loan-to-value (LTV)...

Other news

Why predicting 2025 interest rates feels like a fool’s errand

In my first (and for some reason clearly not my last) article last month,...

Bank of England expected to hold interest rates at 4.5% amid economic uncertainty

The Bank of England is widely expected to maintain interest rates at 4.5% when...

£6.5k bill for homebuyers who miss stamp duty deadline

Rent and mortgage spending rose 7.7% year-on-year in February, as more homeowners moved from...