July lending down 6% on 2010 figure
Mortgage lending in July fell by 1%, leaving lending now 6% lower than the same month a year ago, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders.
The CML said 拢12.6bn of loans were made in July, down from 拢12.7bn in June. The fall comes against a backdrop of weak economic data for the economy as a whole, but positive financial results from a number of the major housebuilders.
The further fall from the 2010 figures comes despite the fact the amount of money lent on mortgages in 2010 was less than half the amount lent at the height of the boom in 2007.
CML chief economist Bob Pannell said the data showed prices were set to drift lower in the coming months. 鈥淯K economic prospects have deteriorated as a result of weaknesses in some of the major economies and renewed stresses in the eurozone area associated with the sustainability of government finances,鈥 he said. 鈥淗ousing market conditions remain subdued, but pretty stable. Seasonal factors continue to provide some support, but underlying house purchase activity may drift lower over the coming months.鈥
Peter Rollings, chief executive of estate agent Marsh & Parsons said: 鈥淟ending remains a world away from the level we need to see for the national housing market to pick up steam again. Despite the recent improvement in mortgage rates, demand for mortgage finance is still being thwarted by overly strict criteria.
鈥淯ntil lenders address the dearth of lending to lower income buyers, we won鈥檛 see a renewed recovery in the national housing market.鈥
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