I mentioned last week that the mortgage
market is buoyant. And it is. However, there have been some
‘ripples’ in this with three well known lenders (in the specialist sector)
closing their doors, or revisiting
their funding options in the first quarter of the year.
Sadly, last week there was another
casualty of the uncertainty of funding lines (and Brexit) that is facing us all
as Magellan Homeloans shut their doors. Being a local specialist lender,
based in Leatherhead, this is a real shame as they considered mortgages for
those with a credit blip, help to buy schemes and specialist buy to let.
The Lender’s CEO stated ‘The competitive landscape has continued to
shift, mortgage loan interest rates are reducing when the cost of funding is
rising, and some lenders are taking on more credit risk despite the volatile
economic backdrop. Magellan
has prided itself on maintaining excellent credit standards whilst helping customers who have been
disenfranchised by high street lenders. However, we do not wish to compete in a
market which we view as unsustainable.”
We
obviously wish all their team well for the future.
Is
this the start of further lenders pulling out of the market…..who knows?
But we are set for a long period of uncertainty and if you are looking to
review your mortgage finances, maybe you shouldn’t hang around.
Conversely, with some lenders recently reducing
rates and chasing completion volumes, we are seeing more people being
declined. Not necessarily due to adverse credit, but because their credit
score is not as high as they thought, and they don't meet the lenders
requirements as a result.
Credit scoring is one of the most widely used means
to assess a customer’s ability to obtain a mortgage. All credit scores
include a credit search – this is a review your financial history, payments to
utility suppliers, mobile phones, etc. The high street lenders, in the
main, use credit scoring. However, do your homework as many smaller
lenders will offer just as attractive rates, but they will manually assess your
ability to obtain a mortgage and use a human to assess your credit profile,
rather than a computer aided credit score decision making
system. And make sure you deal with someone who has access to the
whole market, so you get the best possible options for your requirements.
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