The Housing Boom
A cap on the proportion of home loans that can be lent at high multiples of income has been proposed.
The plan was outlined by the Bank of England as governor Mark Carney said the housing market could be a threat to the UK economy’s stability.
Under the proposal, lenders will not be allowed to lend any more than 15% of residential mortgages at more than 4.5 times a borrower’s income.
Affordability checks on borrowers will also be strengthened.
The Bank’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) has a remit is to tackle any threat to the stability of the UK’s economy and the measures aim to prevent the housing market getting out of control in the future.
The key recommendations are:
- Ensuring lenders check mortgage applicants can cope with a three percentage point rise in interest rates – slightly tougher than current affordability checks
- Limiting risky lending by putting a 15% cap on the number of mortgages that banks and building societies can give to people who want to borrow more than 4.5 times their income
- A separate Treasury pledge that bans anyone applying for a loan through the Help to Buy scheme borrowing any more than 4.5 times their income
Future-proofing
The Bank said that the plans would not have an immediate effect on the current housing market, and would not suddenly harm a potential buyer’s ability to get on the property ladder.
“These actions will have a minimal impact in the future if, and it is an important if, if the housing market evolves in line with the bank’s central view,” Mr Carney added.
“The 15% cap… could quickly become relevant if house prices grow more than we expect, if incomes grow less rapidly than we expect, or if underwriting standards slip.”
Mr Carney said that the Bank was acting in a proportionate and graduated way, acting early, and putting in place “a fire-break” on riskier lending.
Lenders said this cap would have an impact primarily in London.
“Nationally, 9% of new loans are at 4.5 times income or more, but the figure is 19% in London,” said Paul Smee, director general of the Council of Mortgage Lenders.
However, Mr Carney said the 15% limit could be reached nationally within a year.
Some lenders, notably Lloyds Banking Group and RBS, have already limited mortgage lending to four times income for loans worth more than £500,000. The average new mortgage for a house purchase is £135,200.
The action by Lloyds and RBS was specifically aimed at curtailing “inflationary pressures” in the London housing market.
The latest official figures on the housing market showed an annual property price increase of 18.7% in London, where a small proportion of buyers pay in cash.
Baroness Jo Valentine, chief executive of London First, which represents various property firms, said: “If anyone thinks these tighter rules on mortgage lending will somehow make London prices more reasonable then they are mistaken.”
Excluding London and the South East of England, the cost of a home was 6.3% higher in April than 12 months before, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said last week.
But various surveys have suggested that the heat might be coming out of the market, with mortgage approvals – a sign of future sales – having slowed in recent months. Some areas outside of London and the South East have seen relatively little increases in activity among buyers and sellers.
Affordability checks
Lenders are already using new affordability checks – known as the Mortgage Market Review – which test people’s ability to repay were interest rates to rise.
This will be added to, under the Bank of England’s plans, as lenders will need to assess if borrowers could still afford to repay their mortgage if interest rates were three percentage points higher, during the first five years of the term, than at the time the loan was approved.
Mortgage brokers said that relatively few people would be affected by these changes.
Mr Carney said the threat to economic stability was not imminent, but lending could turn from responsible to reckless very quickly.
In light of the bank’s move, the government has said that no applicants for the government’s Help to Buy scheme would be able to borrow at more than four-and-a-half times their income.
Shares in house-builders rose during trading shortly after the Bank’s announcement.
Persimmon shares were up 6.5%, Barratt Developments shares rose by 5.5% and Bovis Homes shares were up by 3.7% within an hour of the announcement.
“Any lack of a real targeting of the housing market would be a positive for the house-builders,” said Richard Perry, analyst at Hantec Markets.
[BBC News]