The Mail on Sunday

The scourge of repossessi­ons is set to return, experts warn

- By Sally Hamilton

THE repossessi­on plague that blighted the lives of tens of thousands of homeowners in both the 1990s housing crash and the global financial crisis a decade ago could be set to return. Industry experts fear a cocktail of financial pressures may push an increasing number of families to the brink, unable to meet their mortgage repayments.

Recent changes to a key state benefit are primarily to blame. But higher interest rates and economic paralysis caused by Brexit – leading to potential job losses – have also raised the unwelcome spectre of the resurrecti­on of mass repossessi­ons.

The number of repossessi­ons and mortgage accounts in arrears has fallen steadily in the past five years on the back of record low interest rates. But industry insiders warn the trend will reverse before the year is out. A key trigger for the anticipate­d rise in arrears is the conversion of state benefit ‘support for mortgage interest’ to a loan.

This benefit had previously protected thousands of vulnerable mortgage borrowers from accumulati­ng arrears and ultimately losing their homes. It had been available to those on income related employment and support allowance – and also pension credit. It meant interest on their loan was paid by the Government direct to the lender.

For those on unemployme­nt benefits this kicked in after a 39-week waiting period on loans up to £ 200,000. For those on pension credit there was no waiting period but help only on loans up to £100,000.

If eligible claimants want to continue receiving support, the cash is still paid direct to the lender. But since April, the benefit is treated as a loan with a variable interest rate of 1.7 per cent. The loan must be repaid either when the borrower’s property is sold or on death.

The amount of help is based on a ‘standard’ rate of mortgage interest, currently set at 2.61 per cent, no matter what rate is charged on an individual’s home loan. Official figures show that just one in five of the 105,000 eligible for mortgage support have taken up the offer.

Jackie Bennett, mortgage expert at industry associatio­n UK Finance, says: ‘There has been a disappoint­ing uptake of the support for mortgage interest loan.

‘Though the Department for Work and Pensions suggests only a couple of thousand borrowers are particular­ly at risk, we argue that all those who have not taken the loan are vulnerable.’

She adds: ‘Worryingly, 61,000 people have actively declined to take the loan. Some will have made alternativ­e arrangemen­ts but others will have stuck their head in the sand.’

Bennett says she soon expects to see the fallout from this rejection of the loan feed through in higher arrears figures – the precursor to repossessi­ons.

Ray Boulger, of mortgage broker John Charcol, blames the Government’s ‘inept implementa­tion’ of the new scheme for the low take-up. But Alastair Neame, housing expert of research group the Centre for Economics and Business Research, suggests fears of a repossessi­ons surge are overblown. He points to healthy employment, wage growth and a high number of borrowers in fixed rate mortgages as reasons not to worry. He adds: ‘Most people pay their mortgage first and cut back elsewhere.’

Neame’s main concern is for older borrower son fixed incomes. He says: ‘They are the greater risk. But for those in genuine trouble the loan option is a no-brainer.’

Last year, more than 140 fami- lies lost their homes every week because they were unable to meet their mortgage repayments. These figures pale when compared to 1991 when ten times that number were repossesse­d each week – 75,500 over the year. In 2009, with the financial crisis at its peak, 940 people a week lost their properties.

Unlike in the 1990s, repossessi­on is now a lender’s last resort. Struggling borrowers can request a payment holiday, ask for a mortgage term to be extended or arrears to be added to the loan.

 ??  ?? BLIGHT: House repossessi­ons could rise as families miss payments after a key state benefit is changed to a loan
BLIGHT: House repossessi­ons could rise as families miss payments after a key state benefit is changed to a loan

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