Home Property 68% quarterly spike in bridging lending seen in Q1, with chain breaks driving lending activity 

68% quarterly spike in bridging lending seen in Q1, with chain breaks driving lending activity 

by LLP Finance Reporter
12th Jun 23 5:08 pm

The latest market analysis by bridging finance specialists, Apex Bridging, has revealed that there was a huge spike in bridging lending during the first quarter of this year, primarily driven by chain breaks following the market turbulence caused by last September’s mini budget.

The analysis by Apex Bridging shows that £278.8m was lent via bridging loans during Q1 of this year, a huge 68% increase versus the previous quarter and by far the highest quarterly sum seen over the last two years.

Bridging lending had previously peaked in Q3 2022 at £214.7m, before the market uncertainty caused by September’s mini budget caused many to reassess their position within the market. This saw total bridging lending fall by -23% during the final quarter of this year but, now that the dust has settled, this downward trend has reversed significantly.

While investment purchases were the key factor behind bridging loans during the final quarter of 2022, it was chain breaks driving the sector in Q1 of this, accounting for a quarter of all lending. This highlights the tougher market conditions facing many buyers and sellers who are now having to adapt with higher borrowing costs and cooling house prices.

However, investment purchases remained the second biggest factor behind bridging lending during the first quarter of this year, with unregulated transactions also accounting for the largest proportion of market activity at 53.8%.

Managing Director of Apex Bridging, Chris Hodgkinson said, “The breakdown of the bridging sector demonstrates the changing landscape we’ve seen in recent months, with the mortgage market turbulence caused by September’s mini budget resulting in a higher degree of borrowing as a result of chain breaks.

However, it’s fair to say that 2023 has started with a far greater degree of optimism than many expected and this is demonstrated by the fact that investment purchases continue to account for a significant level of market activity.

As the year progresses, we expect stability to return to the residential market, which should reduce the level of bridging required to remedy chain breaks. At the same time also expect unregulated commercial investment activity to remain robust.”

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