Housing Equity Withdrawal is -£23.5m in the last year
Posted on 4 July 2009 by
The Bank of England announced yesterday that Housing Equity Withdrawal in the first quarter of 2009 was -£8.1bn. This figure has now been negative for 4 quarters, rising each quarter, although the figure for the first quarter of 2009 is only 4.9% higher than the last quarter of 2008. The total amount that borrowers injected into their housing equity over the 12 months to 31/3/09 is a massive £23.5bn., which is 1.9% of outstanding residential mortgage balances.
Very few people have been taking further advances in the current climate, and some who wanted to will have been declined by their lender, often because they no longer have enough equity in their property. In addition many borrowers, especially those on trackers, will have found it easier to make overpayments because of lower interest rates. Thus the gross amount of equity withdrawal will not only have been very low but will also have been dwarfed by scheduled capital repayments and overpayments.
The savings ratio in the U.S. has increased significantly since the credit crunch but that has not happened in the U.K. This is probably at least partly because people are sensibly choosing to repay debt instead. Although sensible from an individual perspective it does mean that consumer spending is reduced and so will delay a recovery in the economy.
Banks and building societies, especially the latter, are complaining about the lack of savings resulting in them not having much money to lend on new mortgages. But whether people save or overpay on their mortgage the money still goes to the bank or building society. Therefore we should be looking at the Housing Equity Withdrawal figures and the savings figures together to assess how cash strapped lenders are.
Category: Interest rates, Mortgages, Personal finance, Property market
The blog postings on this site solely reflect the personal views of the authors and do not neccessarily represent the views, positions, strategies or opinions of Charcol Limited. All comments are made in good faith, and neither Charcol Limited nor Ray Boulger will accept liability for them.
Categories
- Bank of England (67)
- Buy to let (15)
- HIPs (17)
- House and home (65)
- Interest rates (89)
- Miscellaneous (33)
- Mortgages (128)
- Personal finance (28)
- Property market (103)
- Regulation (44)
Archive
- February 2010 (2)
- January 2010 (4)
- December 2009 (4)
- November 2009 (2)
- October 2009 (10)
- September 2009 (3)
- August 2009 (7)
- July 2009 (12)
- June 2009 (5)
- May 2009 (8)
- April 2009 (14)
- March 2009 (4)
- February 2009 (3)
- December 2008 (9)
- November 2008 (6)
- October 2008 (5)
- September 2008 (9)
- August 2008 (2)
- July 2008 (9)
- June 2008 (3)
- May 2008 (1)
- April 2008 (4)
- February 2008 (4)
- January 2008 (2)
- December 2007 (1)
- November 2007 (3)
- October 2007 (6)
- September 2007 (9)
- August 2007 (7)
- July 2007 (15)
- June 2007 (11)
- May 2007 (19)
- April 2007 (3)