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Soaring mortgage demand... Banks unable to meet it though.
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HAMISH_MCTAVISH
Posts: 28,592 Forumite


http://www.myintroducer.com/view.asp?ID=9698. High street banks have reported an increase in demand for mortgages this year, but have admitted they won’t be able to cater for it.
There is no shortage of demand form people willing and able to take on loans.
Just a shortage of money to lend them.
“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie – deliberate, contrived, and dishonest – but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.
Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.”
-- President John F. Kennedy”
Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.”
-- President John F. Kennedy”
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Comments
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its difficult to know what the correct reasons for the recent falls in mortgage applications are as they only publish the number of mortgages granted, not the number of people who attempted to get a mortgage but were told to sod right off.
i suspect though that the true reason is that:
(i) the amount of money that banks were willing to lend on property <£125k at high LTV; and
(ii) the number of people who wanted to buy houses in that band right now
are both falling. i suspect (ii) isn't really falling but that some of the demand was moved forwards a couple of months by the stamp duty situation so a couple of months showed increases and now a couple of months have showed falls.0 -
I would love to see the mortgage rejection statistics for the last few years, but sadly the banks are not required to report them.
I'd be prepared to bet at least 90% of applications are rejected for 10% deposits or lower.
And that north of 50% of applications are rejected overall.“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie – deliberate, contrived, and dishonest – but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.
Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.”
-- President John F. Kennedy”0 -
HAMISH_MCTAVISH wrote: »I would love to see the mortgage rejection statistics for the last few years, but sadly the banks are not required to report them.
I'd be prepared to bet at least 90% of applications are rejected for 10% deposits or lower.
And that north of 50% of applications are rejected overall.
Would it be anything to do with surveyors not agreeing with the price that vendors are asking for their properties?0 -
HAMISH_MCTAVISH wrote: »I would love to see the mortgage rejection statistics for the last few years, but sadly the banks are not required to report them.
I'd be prepared to bet at least 90% of applications are rejected for 10% deposits or lower.
And that north of 50% of applications are rejected overall.
even if they did report formal rejections that wouldn't really tell the whole story as you wouldn't ever keep track of the number of people (who were actually in some sort of a position to buy, not people who wondered whether they could get a £250k mortgage with their JSA and no deposit) who'd been in to talk to a mortgage bod at a bank to ask about a mortgage in principal, and then been told not to bother applying.0 -
shortchanged wrote: »Would it be anything to do with surveyors not agreeing with the price that vendors are asking for their properties?
No, it would be everything to do with banks having to ration mortgages as the demand for them exceeds the supply of funds to lend.“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie – deliberate, contrived, and dishonest – but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.
Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.”
-- President John F. Kennedy”0 -
Shortage of money probably caused by people with money taking it out to buy houses as interest rates were !!!!.0
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chewmylegoff wrote: »even if they did report formal rejections that wouldn't really tell the whole story as you wouldn't ever keep track of the number of people (who were actually in some sort of a position to buy, not people who wondered whether they could get a £250k mortgage with their JSA and no deposit) who'd been in to talk to a mortgage bod at a bank to ask about a mortgage in principal, and then been told not to bother applying.
True.
And the banks would also no doubt fiddle the figures as they're currently doing with commercial lending.
Where small businesses apply for lending, only to have it approved on rates so high and terms so onerous nobody in their right mind would agree.“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie – deliberate, contrived, and dishonest – but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.
Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.”
-- President John F. Kennedy”0 -
HAMISH_MCTAVISH wrote: »I would love to see the mortgage rejection statistics for the last few years, but sadly the banks are not required to report them.
I'd be prepared to bet at least 90% of applications are rejected for 10% deposits or lower.
And that north of 50% of applications are rejected overall.
You've just stated this one another thread...HAMISH_MCTAVISH wrote: »Macaque, businesses should be free to hire the best candidate for the job if those people are here legally. You want to force them to hire only young people with British citizenship.
Should business not be free to lend to whoever they want?
Or do you change your tune dependant on what it effects...or more to the point...how it effects you?0 -
HAMISH_MCTAVISH wrote: »I would love to see the mortgage rejection statistics for the last few years, but sadly the banks are not required to report them.
I'd be prepared to bet at least 90% of applications are rejected for 10% deposits or lower.
And that north of 50% of applications are rejected overall.
You are aware you have just put me in the upper 10% of your sample.Have my first business premises (+4th business) 01/11/2017
Quit day job to run 3 businesses 08/02/2017
Started third business 25/06/2016
Son born 13/09/2015
Started a second business 03/08/2013
Officially the owner of my own business since 13/01/20120 -
HAMISH_MCTAVISH wrote: »True.
And the banks would also no doubt fiddle the figures as they're currently doing with commercial lending.
Where small businesses apply for lending, only to have it approved on rates so high and terms so onerous nobody in their right mind would agree.0
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