20 Nov 2012

You asked us


"The Council of Mortgage Lenders have released figures showing that the number of repossessions has fallen. Nice to see some positive news!" 
Indeed, as recently reported by The BBC, the number of homes being repossessed has fallen to a five year low. The CML reported that there were 8,200 repossessions during the third quarter of 2012 which is the lowest quarterly figure since 2007. 
There are, though, some underlying concerns. Whilst the number of borrowers in arrears is stable at 159,100 and the number of repossessions is falling, this is reflective of record low interest rates and lenders showing restraint with those borrowers in difficulty. Lenders have been under pressure not to repossess properties unless it is genuinely a last resort; they also have to jump through many hoops to successfully obtain Court permission to seize a borrower's home.  
Long term arrears have risen but Banks won't be able to go on absorbing arrears into their balance sheets indefinitely, and they also have a duty of care to ensure borrowers don't build up too much debt by allowing them to stay in a property if this is unsustainable.

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