Thursday, May 21, 2009

One in five mortgage applicants is now a first home buyer in the UK

UK first home buyers had vanished from the property market when the credit crisis began, but have come out of the woodwork and now account for 20 percent of mortgage applications at one of Britain's biggest brokers.
In Australia the figures went from one in six and is now one in four home buyers that are first time home buyers. The difference is largely due to the First Home Owners Grant Boost that exists in Australia.
According to John Charcol, 21percent of purchasers using the broker in April were first-time buyers. The figure dropped as low as 4.1 percent in October last year.
The John Charcol Index, the broker's monthly mortgage activity monitor, revealed a sharp increase in the proportion of purchases made by first-time buyers in the first four months of this year, with that proportion being three and a half times higher than in the previous four months.
The return of significantly more first-time buyers in to the market this
year, despite the lack of low-deposit mortgages, is one of the best indicators
of confidence we've got at the moment

"A surprising number of first-time buyers have managed to find deposits of at least 25 percent in order to access a wider choice of mortgages and get a cheaper deal." Many were borrowing money from their parents to raise the deposits required by lenders, he added.
The broker also reported that fixed-rate mortgages now accounted for 82 percent of its customers' applications.
It said: "The proportion of applications for fixed-rate mortgages continued to climb in the last month, from 81percent in March to 82 percent of all business written by John Charcol in April. "This number is over 70 percent higher than the proportion of fixed-rate applications in January, when it stood at 48 percent."