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Thursday, September 24, 2009

BTL Mortgage News from our Resident Broker


Latest research from Paragon Mortgages says that almost 9 out of 10 landlords had found it more difficult to secure a buy to let mortgage in the last 3 months, compared to the previous 3 months.

Now the cynical amongst you may say Paragon obviously have a lot of time on their hands at the moment, and therefore are thinking of ways to keep their profile in the news whilst awaiting new funding lines. (As an aside, I always really liked Paragon for their underwriting and range of mortgage products. It will be a great day for landlords when they are back in the market anyway, I digress)

Now it's true that lending in general, and in particular the number of buy to let products, has had a massive reduction in choice over the last couple of years but my message is simple: there is still funding out there.

The two main stumbling blocks seem to be credit score and cost, so lets look at them both.

Credit score:
If you are experiencing problems with lenders credit scoring, then why not see if your partner or a member of your family can buy the property instead? (Just make sure you get your legals in place) or why not use a lender who doesnt use the credit score? We have a lender at 75% that doesnt use automated credit scoring, but has old-fashioned manual underwriting. Yes, a real person.
Finally, there also a myth that once you have over 10 to 15 properties that you can no longer get a mortgage. Well, not for us! We regularly place investors with 30 to 40 existing properties with buy to let lenders.

Cost:
Theres nothing like talking about buy to let arrangement fees to raise the blood pressure of the seasoned property investor. However, heres my take on it buy to let mortgages were always seen as semi-commercial and slightly higher risk than residential mortgages.

In the last couple of years they got closer and closer to residential mortgage pricing, but that connection has now broken and for the foreseeable future I cant see it changing.
Finance is one of the key factors that is holding back the housing market, therefore it would make sense that as buy to let finance becomes more readily available and less expensive, this will help to push the market higher. So if you find a property you want to buy, now factor in the extra mortgage costs into your projections, because if you wait until mortgage finance to get better, you may end up paying more that property anyway. It does not take much to imagine an average property uplift of over 2.5% over the coming months, and yet that is the average fee. Perspective is what is needed here; if the deal works. It works.

My personal view is that well look back at this point as a golden year to purchase property.




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