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Thousands more homeowners are having their houses repossessed than official figures suggest, a leading housing charity has said as the City watchdog prepares to publish repossessions data for the first time today.
Shelter, the housing charity, said that the number of repossessions could be a fifth higher than current figures suggest because of actions taken by “second charge” lenders.
Tens of thousands of people have taken out a “second charge” home loan on their property and are liable to repossession if they fall behind on payments. The second charge market is worth more than £11 billion. Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) repossession data do not include any actions taken by second charge lenders.
The CML said that there were 27,100 repossessions last year, but Shelter said the figure could be closer to 32,000, once second-charge actions were taken into account. While the CML said that repossessions would increase by 50 per cent to 45,000 this year, Shelter said that the increase could be much greater, forecasting that an additional 9,000 borrowers will lose their homes at the hands of second-charge lenders.
The Financial Services Authority will today publish the number of repossessions by all regulated lenders. While these figures are expected to be higher than the CML figures, they are unlikely to show the extent of the problem because many second-charge lenders are not regulated by the watchdog and will not be included in the data.
Caroline Davey, deputy director of policy and research at Shelter, said: “We are seeing increasing numbers of vulnerable homeowners being repossessed on the basis of loans of as little as a few thousand pounds.”
Chris Tapp, of Credit Action, the debt charity, said: “About half the people we help who are in arrears have a second charge loan on their property.”
The Finance and Leasing Association, which represents 75 per cent of second-charge lenders, said its members did repossess hundreds of homes last year, but on a more modest scale than that suggested by Shelter. It said its members repossessed nearly 800 properties that were not included in the CML's figures.
The association added that, at the end of last year, about 40,000 second-charge mortgage accounts were in arrears by two months or more, compared with 129,800 first- charge mortgage accounts in arrears by three months or more reported by the CML.
Meanwhile, there was some good news for homeowners as two mortgage banks announced cuts to home loan rates yesterday.
HBOS is trimming rates by as much as 0.38 percentage points, bringing a two-year fixed rate from Halifax down from 6.57 per cent to 6.19 per cent tomorrow. Abbey will cut some rates by up to 0.10 percentage points tomorrow.
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People are human and if some people are making easy money by buying houses they want some of the action and to make money also. The papers were saying houses were increasing 1000 pounds per month and what with television house make overs and how to flip a house, you have a recipe for disaster.
Tony, dartford, U.K
We waited 4 years for the bust we knew must come but prices kept increasing so we bought our first home in Jan 07. Papers were full of explainations of the fundamental shortage of housing - divorces, single households, life expectancy, immigration etc. Now everyone seems to think they told us so.
Elaine, London,
The saddest thing I have every seen, while working as an Estate Agent, is to go into a house that had been reposessed.
The part remains of the last meal, a few childrens toys and other posessions that had to be left behind.
I own my own home but there but for the grace of God go you or I.
Barbara, Hereford,
I'm a bit tired of seeing that people are repossessed 'at the hands of lenders'
They borrowed it and they can't pay it back
It's self inflicted
alex, maidstone, england
Experts always said that this was a bubble that was going to burst however everyone ignored the signs and carried on buying. I think its great news this generation were taught what a boom an bust economy can be like. Labour lied and said it wasn't, you were stupid to believe them.
Sunny Patel, Coventry,
It's called sanity returning. Who wants to live in a world where one can't get a home?
john, Liverpool, U.K.
How is this surprising?
Property "boom" in Britain was an even bigger bubble than dotcom. 6,5 times avg earnings? Give me a break!
I hope it pops in a huge way so normal people can get a home for a fair price and greedy Posh n' Beck wannabe chavs understand there is no such thing as free money.
alpha, London, UK
but of course no Labour MP's, no regulators, no-one in the Treasury, not Gordon Brown (architect of this mess), not Mervyn King (Governor of the Bank of England, still?) NONE of those responsible for this mess will lose their homes. And the Tories sat on their hands watching it unfold, said nothing.
Russell Hicks, Woldingham, Surrey