23
Dec
Mortgage approvals reach two-year high

As reported in The Guardian today "Mortgage approvals reach
two-year high"
The number of mortgages approved for
purchase reached its highest level for two years in November,
figures published by the British Bankers' Association (BBA) showed
today.
The number of approvals increased by 152.3% in November compared
with the same month last year, and by 0.4% on November 2007, as
44,713 new mortgages were approved. The average loan size increased
to £142,200 in November, a rise of 21.8% compared with the
same month last year.
The value of mortgages approved for house purchase rose to
£6.6bn, more than £1bn higher than the average of the
previous six months, and an increase of 208.7% compared with a year
earlier.
But while the figures have climbed significantly, the BBA said
comparisons with the low point "reflect the weakness of the market
then rather than indicating a much stronger market now".
Gross mortgage lending also increased over the past six months,
with lending in November standing at £9.2bn, up from £9bn
in October and a substantial increase on the £8.6bn average of
the previous six months. But it remained 12.2% lower than last
November.
Borrowing for remortgages remains low, however, with 22,360
remortgages in November, down 62.7% on two years ago and a drop of
25.3% compared with November last year. Low standard variable rates
reflecting the Bank of England base rate – currently 0.5%
– have encouraged borrowers to stay put with their lender
rather than chase more competitive deals elsewhere.
Meanwhile, the amount of money people put by in personal
deposits halved in November compared with the previous month. About
£1.4bn was deposited, down from £3bn in October and lower
than the six-month average of £2.6bn. Consumer credit also
fell by £0.3bn in November.
The BBA's director of statistics, David Dooks, said the latest
data showed "household priorities". "Demand for new personal loans
was weak and people are paying off debt or building savings in
response to economic circumstances.
"In the housing sector, prices have continued to edge up and
approvals for house purchase are now back at a similar level to
that of two years ago. Remortgaging activity continues to run at a
low level as borrowers revert to low standard variable rates or
trackers from maturing fixed-rate loans."
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