According
to my research, of the 14,496 properties in Haywards Heath, 6,026 of those properties
have mortgages on them. 87.4% of those mortgaged properties are made up of
owner-occupiers and the rest are buy to let landlords (with a mortgage).
Theoretically
this is an enormous problem for anyone in this situation as their home is at
risk of repossession if they don’t have some means to repay these mortgages at
the end of the term (the typical term
being 25 to 35 years). Banks and Building Societies are under no obligation
to lengthen the term of the mortgage and, when deciding whether they are
prepared to do so or not, will look at it in the same way as someone coming to
them for a new mortgage.
Back
in the 1970’s and 1980’s, when endowment mortgages were all the rage, having an
endowment meant you were taking out an interest only mortgage and then paying
into an endowment policy which would pay the mortgage off (plus hopefully leave
some profit) at the end of the 25/35-year term. There were advantages to that
type of mortgage as the monthly repayments were lower than with a traditional
capital repayment and interest mortgage. Only the interest, rather than any
capital, is paid to the mortgage company - but the full debt must be cleared at
the end of the 25/35-year term.
Historically
plenty of Haywards Heath homeowners bought an endowment policy to run alongside
their interest only mortgage. However, because the endowment policy was a stock
market linked investment plan and the stock market poorly performed between
1999 and 2003 (when the FTSE dropped 49.72%), the endowments of many of these
homeowners didn’t cover the shortfall. Indeed, it left them significantly in
debt!
Nonetheless,
in the mid 2000’s, when the word endowment had become a dirty word, the banks still
sold ‘interest only’ mortgages, but this time with no savings plan, endowment
or investment product to pay the mortgage off at the end of the term. It was a
case of ‘we’ll sort that nearer the time’ as property prices were on the
rampage in an upwards direction
Increasing
the length of the mortgage to obtain more time to raise the money has gradually
become more difficult since the introduction of stricter lending criteria in
2014, with many mature borrowers considered too old for a mortgage extension.
Haywards
Heath people who took out interest only mortgages years ago and don’t have a strategy
to pay back the mortgage face a ticking time bomb. It would either be a choice
of hastily scraping the money together to pay off their mortgage, selling their
property or the possibility of repossession (which to be frank is a disturbing
prospect).
However, if you want someone to tell you the real story about the Mid Sussex property market, be it good, bad or indifferent, then maybe you should start reading my blog regularly.
No comments:
Post a Comment