New home loans down by 71%
The number of mortgages approved for people buying homes dived by 71 per cent during the past year to hit a new record low, figures showed today.
Just 33,000 mortgages were approved for house purchase during July - 6 per cent fewer than in June, and down from 114,000 in July last year, according to the Bank of England.
Pipeline loans for people remortgaging also continued their downward trend, dropping to 69,000 during the month, a 14 per cent slide compared with June's approvals figure.
The total value of all mortgage approvals continued to slide during the month to reach the lowest level since October 2001 of £14.57bn, 12 per cent less than in June.
The figures, which come as property website Hometrack said house prices in England and Wales had fallen by 5.3 per cent during the past year, show the drag the credit crunch is continuing to have on the mortgage and housing market.
People planning to move are sitting on their hands as they wait for the outlook in the market to become clearer, while those who want to go ahead are struggling to raise the finance they need.
Existing homeowners coming to the end of mortgage deals are also delaying switching to a new rate and are instead staying on their lender's standard variable rate.
This inertia is likely to be caused by them either hoping the mortgage market will improve in the near future, enabling them to get a better deal if they wait, or because they do not have enough equity in their home to qualify for a more competitive rate in the current climate.
Total mortgage advances fell for the sixth month in a row during July to just £21.51bn, the lowest level since December 2004, the Bank of England said.
But net mortgage lending, which strips out redemptions and repayments, increased slightly to £3.23bn, up from £3.14bn, although it is still 65 per cent lower than in July last year.
Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at Global Insight, said: "The very weak Bank of England mortgage data shows that housing market activity continues to be throttled by stretched affordability and ongoing very tight lending conditions."
He added that the approvals figures pointed to "further marked falls" in house prices over the coming months.
Oliver Gilmartin, senior economist at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, said: "Yet another low for mortgage activity offers little hope that house price declines will find a floor any time soon.
"Buyer interest has shown some murmurings of a recovery in recent months but, with the barrier of mortgage finance fortified by the day, pent-up demand will only exacerbate the boom-bust cycle once a return to normal market conditions resumes."
Unsecured borrowing rose by £1.09bn during the month, up on June's figure of £906m, but below the recent six-month average.
Within the total, credit card borrowing was relatively subdued, with outstanding debt rising by £320m, down from £430m the previous month.
But lending through loans and overdrafts increased to £770m, well up on June's rise of £476m.
Meanwhile the Building Societies Association said the continued economic uncertainty had contributed to the amount of money saved with building societies doubling during July, compared with the same month of 2007.
Net receipts to building societies totalled £1.44bn during the month, up from £723m in July last year.
But net mortgage lending was negative for the second month running, meaning that repayments and redemptions on existing mortgages outstripped lending through new ones.
Net lending during July was minus £79m, well down on a positive figure of £506m in the same month of 2007, but better than June's level of minus £526m.
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