No-deposit mortgages poised to make comeback
High-value, no-deposit mortgages are back, on at least a limited scale.
Discontinued for the most part in the wake of the credit crisis, small lender Aldermore will begin Monday to offer home buyers a loan for up to 100 percent of the property’s value, on the condition that a parent or guardian guarantee 25 percent of the loan.
The loan being offered under these terms is a three-year fixed rate mortgage at 6.48 percent for up to a maximum of £250,000 to home buyers in England and Wales.
The loan, offered initially through just a few brokers, has as an additional condition that the borrower must be at least 25 years old, and there are fees involved, including a £299 non-refundable booking fee and a £999 completion feel.
The buyer taking out the loan will have to prove that they can afford monthly payments on the mortgage and the guarantor will have to show they can make the payments on the part of the loan they are guaranteeing.
The parent or guardian guaranteeing the loan will not be out any money up front, but if the property is repossessed and sells for less than the purchase price, the guarantor will be responsible for making up the difference.
Charles Haresnape, managing director of residential mortgages at Aldermore said that large deposits had barred many first-time buyers from the housing market and explained his bank’s move in offering the new loan by saying, “We believe this is the single biggest issue facing first-time buyers and it needs to be addressed head on if the UK’s housing market is to have a chance of recovery.”
There have been a few small lenders willing to offer no-deposit home loans during the credit crisis, but those deals were restricted to the local areas served by the one bank and two building societies offering them, including Northern Bank in Northern Ireland and building societies Tipton and Coseley & Marsden.
Category: Mortgage News

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