Interest rate rises slammed by Convey Law property expert
“Irresponsible and unnecessary interest rate rises” slammed by property expert Lloyd Davies as he welcomes stress test relaxation.
The relaxation of stress tests for mortgage borrowers to “give a welcome boost to first time buyers” has been warmly welcomed by Lloyd Davies, a leading property expert although he has still accused the Bank of England of “self-interested policy making” which could yet damage the “still buoyant” housing market.
Davies, chairman of the not-for-profit Conveyancing Foundation, said measures like the stress test relaxation, which was introduced in 2014 to tighten up the mortgage market and avoid mis-selling, together with increasing house prices and affordable mortgages would keep the housing market afloat as long as it was not “further scuppered by the Bank of England” and by the continued “doom-and-gloom prophesying” of its Governor Andrew Bailey.
Instead of interest rate rises, he suggested the Government should tackle inflation by controlling energy prices.
In June, Davies, also Managing Director of leading conveyancing practice Convey Law, slammed the Bank of England’s continued rise in interest rates as “inflammatory nonsense” and said that “trigger-happy doom-mongering” could damage the housing market and therefore the UK economy.
Speaking this week, Davies said:
“The mortgage stress test was a clear barrier for many borrowers. It was effectively brought in as a reaction to the 2008 financial crisis when widespread mortgage mis-selling led to the housing market crashing and therefore the economy.
“However, the insistence on lenders testing whether potential mortgage holders could cope with a 3% interest rate instead of the current one meant that many people who could easily afford a mortgage at the recent rates – which have been low for some years – were being denied a mortgage just on the strength of future affordability probability.
“For many people, particularly those who were first-time buyers or relatively new to the property ladder, these stress tests were grossly unfair as they were effectively subjective. Relaxing it will clearly help to encourage first time buyers and increase their chances of being allowed a mortgage which will provide an injection to the housing market.”
However, Davies said the measures, although welcome, would be a “drop in the ocean” if “rampant interest rate rises continued unchecked” and said the Bank’s sixth rate rise in a row since December 2021 on August 4 was not tackling inflation but would damage the housing market.
Lloyd said:
“The latest interest rate rise to 1.75%, is irresponsible and unnecessary. These rapid and sustained hikes are what will drive us to recession. They are being billed as necessary to curtail inflation but I do not believe that and believe that they ‘per se’ will drive us to recession.
“The Government should be doing everything it can to keep the housing market on the up but these continued interest rate rises could have a significant effect on the housing market and, if the housing market declines, then so will the rest of the economy, putting us into a recession.”
He added:
“Inflation is inevitable after several lockdowns and the government printing money for the last two years to combat the Pandemic and so there is no need for ridiculous interest rate increases.
“Thankfully, these increases have coincided with the relaxation of the stress tests for mortgage borrowers and so I think that the housing market will still remain buoyant this year and next as house prices will continue to increase and mortgages are still cheaper than rents. This will be reversed if the Bank of England continue with this self-interested policy to fill their coffers with increased interest payments from borrowers.”
And conveyancing veteran Lloyd, who has been in the industry for over 30 years, and previously said raising rates again will create a “vicious circle of increased household expenditure and increased inflation”.
Lloyd concluded:
“The clear alternative to increasing interest rates to bring down inflation should be to curb the cost of fuel by putting a cap on this with the fuel companies who are making a fortune despite the cost of oil not having increased. I believe that is what most people are screaming out for in the face of the exponential growth in oil and gas companies’ profits not to mention the eye-watering salaries of their top executives.”
Kindly shared by Convey Law
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