Nelson Mail

Loans fall through on buyers

- SUSAN EDMUNDS

Buyers are getting an unwelcome surprise when home loans they thought they had secured fall through just when they need them.

Geoff Barnett, national manager of real estate agency Century 21 in New Zealand, said there were an increasing number of deals not going through because the buyer could not get a loan.

He said, in some cases, buyers thought they were pre-approved and sorted.

‘‘When it gets down to the nitty-gritty of a sale, more lenders are then insisting on getting the likes of valuations done and giving much closer scrutiny to mortgage serviceabi­lity. It’s often when banks are finalising their lending assessment on a specific property that some buyers are then told they no longer meet the lending criteria,’’ he said.

‘‘It’s heart-breaking for buyers, vendors and agents alike when finance falls over but given some internatio­nal uncertaint­y and a levelling New Zealand real estate market, heightened caution by our banks and other lenders is totally understand­able.’’

Banks have toughened their lending criteria over recent months.

Reserve Bank loan-to-value rules also require most owner-occupiers to have a deposit of at least 20 per cent. Investors need 40 per cent.

Mortgage adviser Bruce Patten, of Loan Market, said finance was more of a problem than it had been for some buyers, for a range of reasons.

‘‘People speak to their bank or their adviser and are told, ‘Hey, we don’t have funding at the moment over 80 per cent. However, you meet all the criteria, so when you find something let me know and we will get it sorted with a lender that does have funds.’

‘‘When the time rolls around, turns out the informatio­n given at the time wasn’t 100 per cent actuate and because they were not actually approved they have issues.’’

He said valuations could also be an issue. If people were offering more than the market value of a property, the valuation could make that clear and a bank would be unwilling to lend.

Non-disclosure of maintenanc­e work was also a rising problem, he said.

‘‘People do work, especially involving plumbing and electrical work, but they don’t get it signed off. This creates an issue for insurers and in turn banks, and sometimes the bank won’t accept the property as security.’’

New Zealand Bankers’ Associatio­n chief executive Karen Scott-Howman said banks would consider a range of factors when assessing applicatio­ns.

‘‘People seeking home loans need to be up front with the bank about their personal circumstan­ces, such as existing financial obligation­s and outgoings,’’ she said.

 ?? PHOTO: JOHN HAWKINS/STUFF ?? Buyers are being told to make sure they fully understand what a bank has agreed to, before they make an unconditio­nal offer.
PHOTO: JOHN HAWKINS/STUFF Buyers are being told to make sure they fully understand what a bank has agreed to, before they make an unconditio­nal offer.

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