x
By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience.
Written by rosalind renshaw

Mortgage lending this year will fall to a new low, the head of Mortgage Advice Bureau has said. CEO Peter Brodnicki estimates that the total mortgage market in 2012 will be £125bn.

He said: “We have not been that low before, but with Santander announcing that it will be lending £10bn less this year, it is hard to see that anyone will pick up the slack, and indeed some other lenders could follow suit.

“The next eight months will, in lending terms, be extremely hard.”

Brodnicki’s estimate compares with £135bn last year, and £360bn at the height of the boom.

He said that a major problem had been created by the ending of the Stamp Duty holiday for first-time buyers in March: “The problem was that for the first three months of the year, both brokers and lenders were going over target. In fact, all that had happened was that deals had been brought forward.

“On top of that, we have the challenges of interest-only mortgages dying the death and lenders demanding high deposits. Whole chunks of people who were previously able to buy property will never be able to do so again.”

Further hurdles are the prospect of more regulation, plus the inevitable disruption that will be caused by the Jubilee and Olympics. He also describes down-valuing by surveyors as ‘a constant challenge’.

“It affects some types of properties more than others, and some areas more than others. Down-valuing is also more obvious with certain lenders,” he says.

Brodnicki forecasts that lending next year will pick back up to last year’s level of £135bn. But will it ever go back to what it was? He doesn’t think so. “Whenever I go to a meeting, we always talk about a recovery, or whether what we have now is the norm. My feeling is that the market will pick back up to £180bn to £190bn, but not back up to £360bn.”

Despite the slow mortgage market, Mortgage Advice Bureau made record profits last year and has expanded significantly.

Last August, it operated through 650 estate agency branches – ahead of the pre-crash high of 500 branches. Today, thanks to two major deals, it now has a presence in 850 estate agency offices.

The first deal was with Countrywide and is a 50:50 joint venture with Capital Private Finance, by which MAB handles the mortgage requirements for Countrywide’s upmarket brands – Hamptons, John D Wood, Sotheby’s International Realty and Faron Sutaria. That deal brought 120 branches into the MAB network.

The second deal was the purchase of Mortgage Talk, which added some more estate agency branches, but also gave MAB entry into the new-build sector.

With mainstream mortgage lending predicted to be low, Brodnicki anticipates concentrating activity on the buy-to-let and new-build markets.

Growth is continuing, with MAB expanding at a healthy rate. “Each week, we are adding more estate agency branches,” says Brodnicki.

How does he square MAB’s success with the market slowdown? Estate agents “need to get their mortgages away”, he says, and MAB has a strong track record.

Some agents are finding that their own, possibly long-standing, mortgage arrangements are faltering as lenders become pickier as to the quality of their network. “Lenders no longer just look at volume but at other aspects of performance, and will, for example, give only some brokers access to certain funds,” says Brodnicki.  

There is also, of course, the small matter of an incentive for agents to earn money from being able to offer a MAB presence – important in today’s slow housing market.

He also thinks that being able to offer complete transparency, whereby agents can track a mortgage deal from the first appointment with a MAB broker all the way through to completion, is a real plus.

So, even with the next eight months of mortgage doldrums, does he think that MAB will continue to buck the general trend?

“I will be surprised if we do not have 1,000 branches in a year’s time,” says Brodnicki.

Comments

  • icon

    Corporate Junkies

    I am sitting here thinking "wow".. The IFA who looks after me is bloody good at his job, gets the deals through, keeps me informed at all stages and is not tied to a panel.

    He is good at his job, I am good at mine. What more could a customer want?

    These blokes are just trying to carve out a bigger share of an existing market for themselves.

    When are the public going to switch on to the fact that all these 'corporate' people with cars, salaries and expenses have to be paid for, but offer nothing extra?

    Funny old world!

    • 17 May 2012 10:37 AM
  • icon

    In answer to some of the questions below, this data has just been released:

    "The end of a stamp duty concession boosted lending to first-time buyers in March with a 74 per cent increase in loans on the previous month, the Council of Mortgage Lenders confirmed today.

    Some 24,000 loans, worth a combined £3billion, were given out to first-time buyers as they rushed to beat March 24 deadline, after which they are no longer able to take advantage of the suspension of 1 per cent stamp duty on homes costing less than £250,000.

    The CML said lending was 57 per cent up on last year with first-time buyers accounting for 42 per cent of total house purchase loans in the month, the highest proportion since 2001."

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/mortgageshome/article-2145167/CML-Lending-time-buyers-surged-74-rush-beat-stamp-duty-holiday-deadline.html#ixzz1v2wNrQqP

    • 16 May 2012 16:32 PM
  • icon

    Ray - There was massive increase in the number of mortgages in March (due to stamp duty) we have not had figures for April but predictions (yours included) are that the figures will be massively down.

    • 16 May 2012 15:55 PM
  • icon

    Ray - There was massive increase in the number of mortgages in March (due to stamp duty) we have not had figures for April but predictions (yours included) are that the figures will be massively down.

    • 16 May 2012 15:55 PM
  • icon

    Surely the NUMBER of individual mortgages agreed is very important? I would think they are down, but by what percentage? What was the average loan?

    Just a thought.

    • 16 May 2012 14:48 PM
  • icon

    I like this guy.
    Last year lending was at £135bn. Santander announce that they are withdrawing £10bn of lending.
    'Peter Brodnicki estimates that the total mortgage market in 2012 will be £125bn.'

    And the state the bloody obvious award goes to.........

    • 16 May 2012 09:58 AM
  • icon

    Ha Ha!!! lololollool!!!............ you need to be a bit more subtle with your plug their Fenton.

    • 16 May 2012 09:21 AM
  • icon

    In a slow market this is a very good performance from MAB.
    I might have a look at them to do mortgages in my branches.

    • 16 May 2012 09:00 AM
MovePal MovePal MovePal