Britain’s mortgage market has contracted for a fifth month in a row, official figures show, as the jump in interest rates that followed Liz Truss’s September 2022 mini-budget continued to trigger a collapse in demand for new home loans.
The Bank of England said the drop in January took the number of mortgage approvals to the lowest level since 2009, which followed the 2008 financial crash, excluding the dramatic drop after the first Covid-19 lockdown in 2020.
Analysts blamed the mini-budget for the fall in demand for new mortgages to fund house purchases and a dive in the number of households re-financing loans while the prospects for the property market remained uncertain.
However, the fall in January was smaller than in the previous four months, suggesting some confidence was returning to the mortgage market, though at a much lower level than last summer.
Jason Ferrando, the chief executive of the online lending intermediary easyMoney, said: “There’s no doubt that September’s disastrous mini-budget and the mortgage sector uncertainty that followed has had a negative impact on the UK property market, leaving a decline in both mortgage approval and house prices in its wake.”
House prices have begun to fall in response to the decline in demand, though a slowdown in new housebuilding and the withdrawal of properties for sale, limiting the supply of homes, have limited the scale of the decline.
Samuel Tombs, the chief UK economist at the consultancy Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the figures confirmed “that buyers were waiting for a large correction in house prices, and a larger fall in mortgage rates, before re-entering the market”.
Net approvals for house purchases, which are an indicator of future borrowing, decreased to 39,600
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