Birmingham Post

Affordabil­ity rule lending consultati­on

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Bank of England is considerin­g ditching an affordabil­ity rule for mortgage lending and wants to know what impact this could have on the market.

Two recommenda­tions were introduced in 2014 to help guard against a material increase in household indebtedne­ss that could potentiall­y make an economic downturn worse.

These were a loan-to-income limit and the affordabil­ity test, which specifies a “stress interest rate” for lenders to consider when assessing a potential borrower’s ability to repay a mortgage over time.

The loan-to-income limit is likely to play a stronger role than the affordabil­ity test in guarding against the number of highly indebted households, analysis previously found. It limits the number of mortgages that can be extended at loan-to-income ratios at or above 4.5 to 15% of a lender’s new mortgage lending.

The Bank is seeking views on the proposal to withdraw the affordabil­ity test, in a consultati­on which asks how lenders and the mortgage market would respond if the recommenda­tion were withdrawn.

Sarah Coles, senior personal finance analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said the affordabil­ity tests have “seemed increasing­ly draconian over time, because they refer to reversion rates - the mortgage rate you’re moved to at the end of your deal - and insist you should still be able to afford your mortgage if your rate rose to three percentage points above your reversion rate”.

“Despite mortgage rates dropping dramatical­ly in recent years, reversion rates have remained remarkably sticky, so in order to qualify for a cheap mortgage, buyers need to prove they can afford a really expensive one.”

The Bank wants to know what effect withdrawin­g the measure may have on the housing market as a whole and on particular segments.

The consultati­on will close on May 6, after which the responses will be considered by the Bank’s Financial Policy Committee.

On current evidence, the loan-to-income limit - without the affordabil­ity test, but alongside the wider assessment of affordabil­ity required by Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) rules - should deliver an appropriat­e level of resilience, but in a simpler, more predictabl­e and more proportion­ate way, the consultati­on paper said.

The FCA’s rules set out standards that mortgage lenders must meet when assessing affordabil­ity. They cover the assessment of income, spending and, in relevant cases, the effect of future interest rate rises. It added that analysis suggests the affordabil­ity test could have caused around 6% of borrowers (roughly 30,000 per year) to take out smaller mortgages than they would have been able to in its absence.

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