Manage your Blog

Create your blog now! Easy and Free

mortgagesandnews

02/05/2008 GMT 1

Abbey cuts some mortgage rates

mortgagesandnews @ 11:32

Abbey is to reduce its rates for some mortgages, partly in response to the Bank of England’s liquidity scheme which will inject £50bn ($99bn) into the mortgage market.

The UK’s third largest mortgage lender, owned by Santander of Spain, said it would reduce rates on its flexible and tracker mortgages for new customers by 10 basis points from the end of the week. It would also change its rates on fixed-rate mortgages available through brokers and branches.
Two-year fixed-rate deals for borrowers who have a 25 per cent deposit will come down by 11 basis points, although rates on other fixed-rate products at higher loan-to-value ratios are being held or slightly increased.

The bank said the moves were in response to the Bank of England’s cash injection and take effect from Friday when a two-year tracker rate mortgage will be 6.02 per cent. The bank said: “Whilst the mortgage market remains challenging, Abbey are pleased to be in a position to improve some rates available to our customers. We will continue to offer competitive products whilst still being careful to balance this against the need to maintain service levels for our customers, given recent competitor moves.”

Abbey announced earlier this week it had taken advantage of the disarray among its rivals by grabbing almost 16 per cent of the mortgage market in the first three months of the year.

Wave, a division of Merrill Lynch, the US investment bank, has announced it has temporarily ceased mortgage lending. The division, which lent to customers including those with patchy credit records, said it had acted because there were no signs the securitisation markets would reopen in 2008.

This week the Royal Bank of Scotland said it would cut rates on fixed and tracker loans sold through its branches to new and existing customers by up to 30 basis points.

24/04/2008 GMT 1

Spanish Banks increased their offer mortgages for subrogation

mortgagesandnews @ 09:19

Barcelona, 17 (Europe Press) .- The special mortgages for subrogation experienced a "boom" in March, as a strategy for banks to capture more attractive offerings with new customers in competition to bring mortgages financed with a smaller percentage to 80 % Of housing, according to a report prepared by the comparator financial products online 'Bankimia.

The new releases of such mortgages include differentials between 0.25% of Banco Santander and 0.35% of Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo, as well as other entities Oficinadirecta.com, Bancopopular-ey BBVA, with conditions similar.

In addition, this report reveals that in March rose launching aggressive mortgages with differentials below 0.30%, as Bilbao Bizkaia Kutxa, offered a spread of 0.25%, Deutsche Bank (with a 0.12%) and Caja Navarra (0.20%).

Hardening parallel.

The study also indicates that there have been entities that have withdrawn from different mortgage market, in addition to reducing the supply of this financial product and toughen the conditions of employment, such as Halifax Bank Spain, which has hardened the conditions increasing the differential until 1, 5%, in addition to withdraw from the market mortgages for the purchase of first home.

For its part, Banco Santander Consumer Discontinued mortgage Credhifácil, and has risen from 0.75% to 1% differential mortgage Credhiplus.

The report can also consult a ranking of the best mortgage interest rate, classified by degree of attachment. Thus, Bank Assets leads the classification in paragraph linking minimum, with a mortgage with a spread of 0.30%.

For linking media, Caja Navarra is the one that has a differential lowest of 0.20% and a maximum linkage, is the best position to Deutsche Bank, with a spread of 0.17%. In addition, the three entities offer mortgages of subrogation to lower interest rate.

On the other hand, the best mortgages at a fixed interest rate, by reference to those with a term to 20 years and home insurance, are those of E-ONE (5.75%), ActivoBank (5.85%) and tuBancaja (6.20%).

22/04/2008 GMT 1

The Bank of England announces redemption of mortgage bonds to inject liquidity

mortgagesandnews @ 15:44

The Bank of England has announced that is going to redeem temporarily treasury bonds by mortgage bank with a value calculated from 50,000 million pounds (62,500 million euros) in order to inject liquidity to the market. The monetary authority will this measure available to British banks and other lending institutions affected by the crisis mortgage United States. Furthermore, the entity has announced that the period is three years and represents the biggest step taken by the British financial authorities.

The plan to rescue the bank of England arrives with the injection of 62,500 million at banks and lenders affected by the crisis in the United States. The government is going to distribute bonds that signatures may change by mortgage packages that count as endorsed by the Bank of England.

This initiative represents the biggest step taken by the British financial authorities to inject money to the banking system, after the banks have been clamouring for for months to alleviate the lack of liquidity they have suffered. The ultimate objective is to stimulate lending between banks and also making things easier for home buyers, as confirmed by the British finance minister Alistair Darling.

However, the market fears that the money is insufficient to meet the market demands, as they represent half of the 130,000 million dse new housing loans to be secure every year.

17/04/2008 GMT 1

Mortgage clock ticking, Dodd warns

mortgagesandnews @ 16:21

By James Politi and Krishna Guha in Washington

There are only a few weeks left for Congress and the Bush administration to agree on large-scale government intervention in the mortgage market, according to Chris Dodd, one of the most senior lawmakers overseeing US economic policy.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Mr Dodd said that a compromise deal needed to be reached before home prices collapsed further and election-year politics took over. "I am optimistic at this point, but this has to happen fairly quickly if it is going to be meaningful."

Mr Dodd, the Connecticut Democrat who chairs the Senate banking committee, last month made an aggressive proposal to use public funds to guarantee the refinancing of up to $400bn (€250bn, £200bn) in mortgages at lower values through the Federal Housing Administration, the government-owned mortgage insurer.

The plan is designed to tackle the problem of negative equity - or homeowners holding mortgages worth more than the value of their homes - which has been a key feature of the US housing crisis.

While Mr Dodd said "there is obviously some risk" to taxpayers associated with the plan, he claimed it would help "determine a floor in residential mortgages" and said that doing nothing would allow contagion to spread across US financial markets and the economy.

Mortgage servicers, who manage loan payments on behalf of lenders, would voluntarily agree to forgive parts of loans to struggling borrowers in exchange for some participation in the benefits of future appreciation, according to the proposal, which would be confined to borrowers funding their primary residences.

A similar plan has been moving through the House under the sponsorship of Barney Frank, the chairman of the financial services committee.

While the proposals have been supported in general by US banking regulators, they have not been endorsed by either the Bush administration or many Republicans on Capitol Hill. Mr Dodd failed in his attempt to include his plan in a narrower package of measures to prevent foreclosures that passed the Senate last week.

"I have got a clock in my own head and that clock runs out in the next several weeks," said Mr Dodd. He added that he had "some work to do to find out what the tolerance levels are", and complained that he was "getting mixed messages" from the administration.

Mr Dodd was still hammering out the final details of his proposal, and was open to considering additional incentives that have been proposed for servicers to write down the value of mortgages. These include "negative equity certificates", which would allow lenders to share in any recovery in house prices, and measures to shield servicers from litigation.

A deal with the administration could involve a wider compromise including legislation to reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored mortgage companies, which Hank Paulson, Treasury secretary, has been urging.

The White House and many Republicans have opposed large-scale intervention in the mortgage market amid fears that they would bail out speculators and reward bad behaviour, as well as potentially lose taxpayer money.

"In the current housing crisis I think we have to draw a line. Some homeowners used poor judgment. A lot of lending companies want a bail-out," said Brian Montgomery, federal housing commissioner, at a Senate hearing to examine Mr Dodd's proposal yesterday.

The administration's efforts to tackle the mortgage crisis have so far focused on the HopeNow alliance, a private-sector initiative to help borrowers avoid foreclosures by reworking their mortgages.

Archive | Create your blog now! Easy and Free