| U.K. Mortgage Lending Drops to Lowest Since 2001, CML Says |
|
|
|
| Secondary Market | |||
| Thursday, 19 March 2009 00:00 | |||
|
The gross value of loans fell to 9.9 billion pounds ($14.1 billion) from 11.7 billion pounds in January, the London-based group said today. The total is the lowest since February 2001 and down 60 percent from a year earlier. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government has taken control of four banks and urged them to raise lending as Britain succumbs to its worst economic contraction since at least 1980. U.K. residential mortgage-backed bond markets may stay shut for the rest of this year, according to the Bank of England’s contacts. “There are now fewer active lenders in the market, but the government wants them to lend more,” Michael Coogan, director general of the CML, said in a statement. “Until funding improves, the capacity of lenders to lend will remain constrained.” Average asking prices for a home dropped 9 percent this month from a year earlier as buyers struggled to obtain loans, Rightmove Plc said on March 16. London’s rental home market was the worst regional performer in the U.K. for the three months ended Jan. 31 as a record number of properties were up for lease, a separate report showed today. The Bank of England bought 5 billion pounds of government bonds this week with newly created money in an effort to pump funds into the economy and spur credit provision. SOURCE: Bloomberg
|
| CAMREO.COM |
| REOTECH.COM |
| FUTRABANCORP.COM |
| CONTACT US |
| ADVERTISE |
| SITE MAP |
Add your comments