House purchase lending unchanged in November
November was a stable month with very few changes to the volume and value of mortgage activity, according to new data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders

Some 44,000 loans for house purchase, worth £6.3bn, were advanced in the month.
This was unchanged from October and down 15% by volume and 13% by value from November 2009.
This month sees the launch of a new database for the CML monthly Regulated Mortgage Survey lending figures, and all historic RMS data back to 2005 are now based on this.
There have been revisions to all historic data, reflecting improvements in data coverage and quality.
Although most revisions are modest and within expected statistical error margins, care should be taken in comparing these new figures with any published by the CML previously.
Loans for remortgage were down compared to the same period last year - 12% by volume and 14% by value but they showed a small increase from 25,000 - worth £3bn in October to 26,000 worth £3.1bn in November.
Bank of England Lending to Individuals figures showed a much larger increase in remortgage activity, from 29,200 loans in October to 36,300 in November. The Bank’s figures are based on mortgage approvals, and therefore are a lead indicator of the CML figures which are for mortgage advances.
The CML says this indicates there may be a further, more substantial increase in CML remortgage data in the coming months.
First-time buyers took out 16,400 loans, worth £1.9bn in November, a 3% increase from October, with the value staying the same and a 19% decrease, down 17% by value from the same month last year.
Loans to home movers, on the other hand, were down 2% from October with 27,800 loans, worth £4.4bn, and down 12% compared to November 2009. Like first-time buyers, the value of lending to home movers was unchanged between October and November.
Lower monthly year-on-year business continues in all areas due to the distortions caused by some households bringing forwards house purchase activity before the close of 2009’s stamp duty concession.
Credit criteria remain tight although loan-to-value ratios appear to have eased a little, particularly for first-time buyers. This group borrowed 80% of their home’s value in November and is the second month in a row the loan to value has been at 80%. This is the highest the market has seen since November 2008.
Home movers on average borrowed 68% of their home’s value for the second month running, up from the low of 67% seen over the summer. For all house purchasers, the proportion of income needed to cover the mortgage interest was at an all-time low of 10.7% in November.
Michael Coogan, director general of the CML, says: “It is encouraging to see credit criteria becoming a little more liberal for first-time buyers. But the funding and capital constraints on lenders will continue to exert a dampening effect on lending, and criteria are unlikely to loosen substantially.”
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