Mortgage market malaise continues as house purchase approvals drop

Mortgage approvals have fallen for the second consecutive month, prompting calls to abolish Stamp Duty to stimulate the market.

The latest Bank of England lending figures reveal there were 62,341 mortgage approvals for house purchase during March, down from 65,340 in February and 66,262 in January.

It is also below the previous six-month average of 65,227.

Commenting on the figures, John Phillips, operations director at Spicerhaart, predicted the mortgage market will continue to struggle until Stamp Duty is abolished.

He said: “The mortgage market has been struggling for some time now, with the annual growth rate of mortgage lending remaining at around 3% since 2016.

“Brexit is clearly still having a huge impact – although it is not in the news so much at the moment, and as we move into the warmer months, we may start to see a rise in approvals for purchases, but I think there are bigger issues at play, the main one being Stamp Duty.

“Last month, the House of Lords Committee on Intergenerational Fairness and Provision recommended changes to Stamp Duty as it is ‘seriously distorting the market’ and I think a major shake-up could be the answer.

“Stamp Duty makes up such a huge proportion of the cost of moving that many of those who want to upsize are choosing to extend instead, while those who want to downsize are staying put in what is often an unsuitable sized home.

“The Stamp Duty freeze for first-time buyers has had a hugely positive impact for that end of the market with first-time buyer mortgage approvals huger than ever.

“But in order to help the whole market, something needs to be done to help everyone else. Ideally, Stamp Duty would be abolished altogether, but significant cuts would be a good start.”

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2 Comments

  1. Property Poke In The Eye

    Many factors damaging the housing market, not just stamp duty.

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    1. surrey1

      Stamp duty a more regional issue I guess. Affordability the other one. Certainly more those than Brexit in my view and Brexit is quite the balls up.

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