Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt are said to be considering the move to bolster the chances of first-time buyers getting on the housing ladder.
Reports that the Government is considering a radical scheme to help first-time buyers by guaranteeing mortgages which would require just 1% deposit have left property and finance experts divided.
The
Independent reported at the weekend that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (main picture) and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt were considering the move to bolster the chances of first-time buyers (FTB) ā and more importantly younger voters ā of getting a foot on the housing ladder by guaranteeing mortgages.
MIXED REACTION
But news of the plans received a mixed reaction.
Ying Tan, Habito
Ying Tan, Chief Executive of mortgage broker Habito, says: āThis news will certainly grab the headlines and entice younger voters to support the Government.
āAt first glance, this is great news. In principle, the more help we can get for first-time buyers, the better.ā
But Tan told The Neg that he was concerned how mortgage affordability would be assessed.
āIt is pointless only needing a 1% deposit if itās impossible to borrow the 99% mortgage.
āWith a high loan-to-value comes higher risk for the lender, so rates will certainly be more expensive, giving less disposable income to the consumer.ā
And he adds: āWhat we must avoid is reeling first-time buyers in, without thinking about the possible unintended consequences, leading to a potential house price bubble.
āAt the end of the day what this government and the next need to do is build more homes that are affordably ā itās simple economics.ā
APPROPRIATE CIRCUMSTANCES
Mark Harris, Chief Executive of broker SPF Private Clients, adds: ā99% mortgages could be a good idea in the appropriate circumstances.
Mark Harris, SPF Private Clients
āWith added stamp duty costs, a 99% mortgage can look identical to a 95% mortgage for previous generations. Add in the fact that saving for a deposit while renting is practically impossible, this could be a solution.ā
And he says: āThere are 100% mortgages available today ā for example, Skipton Track Record, which uses the evidence of long-term rent payments as part of its affordability basis and assessment. Also, Barclays Springboard, albeit using equity in a guarantorās house, so net loan-to-value is lower.
āUnlike 100% mortgages in the past, lenders now have more stringent assessments to perform to assess affordability and stressing. There is less risk of borrowers over-stretching themselves.
āNaysayers will no doubt focus on the fact this is a policy to increase demand for housing not supply so inevitably the effect on house prices will be upwards.ā
POLITICAL TINKERING
According to David Hannah, Group Chairman of
Cornerstone Tax, a 99% mortgage scheme would amount to insufficient āpolitical tinkeringā from No.10 to prop up a housing market built on unstable foundations.
David Hannah, Cornerstone Tax
He says: āThese reports of a 99% mortgage loan-to-value mortgage coming from No.10 showcases the utmost desperation from politicians looking for an easy-fix to one of the most prescient issues for young voters, affordability.
āIn my view, encouraging first-time buyers to take on increasingly unaffordable debts is not a viable long-term solution to Britainās housing woes.ā
And writing on X, formerly Twitter, Charlie Lamdin, Founder of BestAgent and Presenter of Moving Home with Charlie, wrote: āIf they did do this, in debt addiction terms, it would be like giving a heroin addict enough money to get an overdose.
It would puff the market one more time and delay the biggest crash weāve ever seen.ā
āIt would puff the market one more time and delay the biggest crash weāve ever seen. If they do implement it so itās available from this spring, yes it would change my -35% price fall expectations. The devil would be in the detail as always.ā
Charlie Lamdin, BestAgent
But Lewis Shaw, owner and Mortgage Expert at Shaw Financial Services, countered that such a scheme ācould be positiveā ā albeit with caveats.
āThe single biggest issue most FTBs face is saving the deposit at the same time as paying eye-watering rents.
āIf we continue to see an exodus of the BTL market and rebalance in favour of FTBs, it could work as long as underwriting is strict and income multiples are capped to prevent house price inflation.
There will be some house price inflation.ā
āIt would also need to be exclusively for FTBs and no one else. Yes, there will be some house price inflation; however, it could also stimulate the big house builders to get cracking rather than sitting on land and not building as they are after the closing of HTB.
Lewis Shaw, Shaw Financial Services
āOwning a home brings a vast range of societal benefits. Countless studies show better health outcomes for homeowners, reduced crime, and better educational outcomes for the children of homeowners; the list goes on and on.
āNo, itās not a silver bullet, and it wonāt solve the problems overnight; however, it could be a touchpaper that reverses the homeownership decline, which I believe would be a positive net benefit.
āYes, it would come with risks. No, itās not a perfect idea, and yes, if poorly done, it wouldnāt be great.
āHowever, if it can be structured correctly, it could lift thousands of FTBs from the grips of insecure tenure and poor-quality housing and allow FTBs to break free of the PRS cycle that so many are often trapped in.ā