Home Residential Property New mortgages worth over £1m total nearly £9bn last year as banks ignore developers

New mortgages worth over £1m total nearly £9bn last year as banks ignore developers

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10th Apr 17 7:42 am

Research finds

The number of new residential mortgages worth over £1 million went up by 24 per cent last year, as banks continue to favour lending to owner-occupiers and reduce lending to property developers, says Lendy, Europe’s leading peer to peer secured lending platform.

Lendy says that the number of new £1m-plus mortgages written by banks last year increased to 4,844, up from 3,896 in 2015. The total value of these mortgages rose 18 per cent over the same period to £8.95bn from £7.59bn.

Lendy explains that regulations such as Basel III have incentivised banks to take risks in the owner-occupier market and cut exposure to property developers, with the availability of funding for developers diminishing as a result.

Recent research from Lendy found that outstanding bank lending to developers fell seven per cent last year, to £14.8bn in 2016 from £16bn in 2015.

Lendy says that too much funding to owner-occupiers just leads to house price inflation. Increased funding to developers increases the supply and moderates house price inflation.

The Government’s Housing White Paper, released in February, has targeted up to 270,00 new homes every year to meet demand – only 190,000 were built last year. Lendy says that developers need more financial backing from banks to get spades in the ground to hit housing targets.

Liam Brooke, co-founder of Lendy, comments: “As more and more money goes to owner-occupiers, boots will struggle to get on the ground working to hit the Government’s housing target.”

“Housing targets will continue to be missed unless banks allocate more money to developers who build multiple homes at rapid rates.”

“As the balance of lending shifts to the owner occupiers’ favour, it is smaller developers that are losing out.”

“It is these small and medium sized developers especially that have found it hard to get funding from banks since the financial crisis. Peer to peer platforms such as ourselves are contributing more and more in getting new developments off the ground.”

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