Nationwide doubles the deposit required for new mortgages
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Nationwide has defied the Government's latest efforts to ease the mortgage
market squeeze by announcing plans to dramatic-ally tighten its lending
criteria for new customers.
The building society has said that borrowers will need to double their
minimum deposit to 10 per cent to be considered for most of its mortgage
products from 1 May, ignoring the Government's attempt to lift mortgage and
financial market tension with a £50bn injection last week.
Applicants will be considered for loans only if the funding is for 90 per
cent or less of the property value on all but two of Nat-ionwide's products,
and the lender has slashed its maximum loan amount from £1m to £500,000 for
all new customers – precisely the type of move the Special Liquidity Scheme
(SLS) rescue package had aimed to prevent. From next month, only borrowers
on Nationwide's three-year fixed or tracker deals will be considered with a
minimum deposit of 5 per cent.
"The mortgage market will not transform overnight and we need to be able to
manage our business in a prudent way while the SLS takes effect," Zoe
Stevens, a spokeswoman for Nationwide, said. "These changes will allow us to
maintain control of the volume of business the Society is attracting, while
enabling us to continue offering our full range of mortgages to our existing
members in a controlled way."
Elsewhere, Abbey will permit interest-only loans only up to a value of 50
per cent from tomorrow, unless the customer has a linked repayment vehicle
such as an ISA. And for all borrowers of more than 90 per cent loan to
value, the bank will require one month's bank statements from each customer
in addition to standard credit checks.
Many had hoped that the SLS would cause a drop in Libor – the rate at which
banks lend to each other – with a knock-on effect of easing rates and
conditions for customers. But the Government's desperate move appears to
have failed and borrowers are now being warned that the biggest struggle is
being able to get a mortgage rather than being able to afford one.
Sean Gardner of the comparison site Moneyexpert.com, said: "Availability is
the biggest hurdle despite all the Government efforts to get lenders
lending. If you don't have a substantial deposit or equity in your house
then your choices are now severely limited. When disposable income is
already at breaking point for many, it is frankly impossible to see how
those with limited savings will find a way to get a foothold on the property
ladder."
Jeremy Leaf of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics), said:
"Sentiment is at a very low ebb and will continue to remain depressed while
the economy suffers from this unique liquidity blight. The slowdown in
prices is directly attributable to a lack of available finance which has hit
demand."
The latest Rics house price survey, traditionally one of the most positive,
found that the rate at which house prices fell was the lowest on record in
March. Some 78.5 per cent more chartered surveyors reported a fall than a
rise in house prices, an increase from 65.7 per cent in February. Meanwhile,
personal loan rates have also been hit hard. In the last two weeks alone
Barclaycard (+0.50 per cent), Lombard Direct (+1.0 per cent), The AA (+0.10
per cent), NatWest (+2.50 per cent) and Tesco Personal Finance (+0.6 per
cent) have all pushed selected rates up.
Michelle Slade of Money-facts.co.uk said: "Since the beginning of the year,
more than half of lenders offering personal loans have made changes to their
rates. NatWest has increased rates on the largest loans by 1.5 per cent,
adding £1,015.20 to the total cost, and Black Horse has increased rates for
those looking for smaller loans by as much as 11 per cent, adding £52.68 in
additional interest over a year."