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Displaying ROOF Blog articles tagged with Repossession

Mortgage help makes profit for claimants

29/03/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money will be used to overpay mortgages after the Chancellor extended the Government’s mortgage rescue scheme for another six months at a fixed rate of 6.08 per cent. More than 200,000 people on certain benefits are covered by the scheme, which was set up to help families to avoid repossession. Industry figures suggest that about a third of homeowners are on standard variable rate and 15 per cent are on tracker deals. The average interest rates on these mortgages are only 4.1 per cent and 3.65 per cent respectively, well below the rate paid by the scheme.

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Home repossessions rise by 15%

17/03/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

FSA figures show 54,055 people had their properties repossessed during 2009, up from 46,945 in 2008. But there was a fall in both the number of repossessions and the number of people who were unable to keep up with their mortgage during the final quarter of the year. Around 11,800 homes were repossessed during the final three months of 2009, 15% fewer than during the previous quarter. The figures are broadly in line with ones reported by the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) for 2009, which showed that 46,000 people had their home repossessed during the year, the highest level since 1995. The FSA’s figures are higher than the CML ones because they include second-charge mortgages and loans advanced by lenders who are not CML members.

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Government extends drive to tackle repossessions

26/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

John Healey has extended the government’s campaign to help struggling homeowners get a grip on their finances and avoid repossession. Over 330,000 households have had help and advice with their mortgages over the past year. But with the pressure on families likely to remain high throughout 2010, starting this week the government is working with CAB to run a string of local help events in 56 repossession ‘hotspots’, so that struggling homeowners can get impartial face-to-face help and advice to keep their home. New radio and local press advertising in all 56 areas will also promote the free telephone advice line and special website to help homeowners struggling with their mortgage payments.

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Repossession data exclude rentbacks

05/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

The number of families forced to hand back the deeds to their home in the recession has been understated, according to the Conservatives, because the official figures exclude ‘sale and rentbacks’. There were 48,000 repossessions in 2009, compared with 75,000 in 1991 at the peak of the last recession. Labour said the figure, which was lower than some earlier predictions, was proof that its measures had worked. But Grant Shapps, shadow housing minister, has claimed that the true number of people losing their homes is far higher. The total cited by Labour, he said, did not include those homeowners who sold their home to a landlord and rented it back in an attempt to remain in the property.

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Only half of repossessed householders attend court

18/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

New research has highlighted that only half of households facing repossession orders actually attend their court hearings. There is also an indication that repossessions are not being considered the option of last resort by the courts. The research, undertaken by CIH’s consultancy arm, ConsultCIH, looked at hundreds of repossession orders made in 2008. The research found that many households are in denial about losing their homes. Conversely, others believe the loss of their home is a foregone conclusion by the time their case gets to court.

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Home repossessions rise by three per cent

16/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

The number of repossessions orders taken out by mortgage lenders rose by three per cent during the third quarter of the year to 13,987, figures from the Financial Services Authority (FSA) have shown.

Despite the increase, the FSA said the number was ‘much in line’ with the average for the year as a whole and six per cent below the figure for the first quarter of the year.

The drop is likely to have been driven by interest rate cuts at the start of the year, which made mortgages more affordable, and increased government help for struggling borrowers.

The FSA said the number of borrowers who had fallen into mortgage arrears of more than 1.5 per cent of their outstanding loan had fallen for the third successive quarter, and at 46,000 was down 10 per cent on the three months between April and June and 30 per cent below the peak in the last three months of 2008.

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Lenders ‘ignoring repossession protocol’

15/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

Mortgage lenders are failing to follow rules designed to help people avoid repossession, according to a damning report published today.

The joint report by AdviceUK, Citizens Advice and Shelter found that in a third of recorded cases mortgage lenders had failed to comply with new rules – known as the ‘pre-action protocol’ – requiring them to take court action as a last resort only.

Before starting legal action, lenders should offer borrowers other options for dealing with their arrears – however, judges only verified they had done so in a handful of cases.

Published on the same day as new repossession figures are expected from the Financial Services Authority (FSA), the ‘Turning the Tide?’ report is based on research into hundreds of cases seen by advisers who give last-minute advice to people at court on the day of their repossession hearings.

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Struggling homeowners’ support extended

10/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

Homeowners facing repossession or struggling to meet mortgage payments after losing their jobs will continue to receive extra support from the government following the pre-Budget report.

The government has said it will freeze the standard interest rate used to calculate its Support for Mortgage Interest (SMI) at 6.08 per cent for a further six months. It said the SMI scheme has benefited around 220,000 homeowners.

From April this year, the government said it would cover the monthly interest due on mortgages of up to £200,000 for borrowers who have been out of work for three months and were having difficulty meeting their payments.

Previously it only offered support to homeowners with mortgages of £100,000 or less.

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The Right to Buy revolution still divides Britain’s estates, 30 years on

07/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

Thirty years ago this month – on 20 December 2023 – the new Conservative government led by Margaret Thatcher published its housing bill, changing the social face of Britain with one of the most popular political promises in history: the Right to Buy.

Today the repercussions are still being felt. This year the number of council houses sold off passed the two million mark; so too did the numbers of people across Britain on waiting lists for a council house, up almost 10 per cent in a year.

Some inner-city areas would need decades to clear their backlog.

With house building all but stopped in a recession that has seen repossessions and unemployment rise, there is a crisis in Britain’s homes, and the finger of blame is pointed firmly at that ‘social revolution’ of 1979.

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Homeowner bailout plan may not stop US housing market crash

07/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

The meltdown in the American housing market is not over yet, with experts warning that a rise in home foreclosures next year and in 2011 could undermine the chances of a sustained economic recovery in the United States.

The Obama administration has set aside $75 billion (£46 billion) under its homeowner bailout plan, known as the Home Affordable Modification Programme, to allow up to four million American homeowners to reduce their monthly mortgage payments and keep them from defaulting on their loans.

Yet despite efforts by the US Treasury Department to step up pressure on mortgage companies to modify more loans, take-up has been slow and the programme has been widely condemned for providing insufficient help to borrowers who have lost their jobs or who owe more than their homes are worth.

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