ROYAL Bank of Scotland has promised customers six months grace if they struggle to meet mortgage repayments.

 The NatWest owner said it wanted to “lift the pressure” on homeowners. A spokesman said: “We want to reassure customers.”
The Government last week urged lenders to grant a minimum three months breathing space.
RBS sold a near 60 per cent stake in the business to the Government last Friday - in exchange for a £20billion bailout.

www.thesun.co.uk

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Despite Government promises to help keep people in their homes in the downturn, repossessions are soaring. More than 100 homes a day are being seized by lenders - that’s a massive 50 per cent up on last year and the highest level since the early Nineties.

But as RICHARD DYSON explains, not everyone is a loser.

The investors - making a killing

The dinner-jacketed staff are welcoming, the sales patter slick, the surroundings plush. Welcome to the first auction of repossessed homes by American firm REDC (Real Estate Disposition Corporation).
Tempted by the growing number of home repossessions in Britain, REDC launched its UK arm, auctiontoday.co.uk, last month to offer a ‘wide selection of properties at auction prices’. More than 400 homes are listed on its website - all repossessions.
The function room at the Hilton Hotel in Gateshead near Newcastle upon Tyne is packed with eager bidders keen to pick up a bargain.

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Vince Cable MP led a debate at Westminster on Tuesday 13th January, questioning the government’s response to the increase in home repossessions.

The Association of Mortgage Intermediaries (AMI) had prepared a parliamentary briefing for Mr Cable, the Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman, ahead of the debate, voicing their concerns for both the private and commercial property sectors.

Figures previously released by the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) had estimated the number of home repossessions at 75,000 in 2009, which Mr Cable noted was just “the tip of the iceberg”. With further news yesterday of a 302 per cent increase in buy-to-let repossessions, Mr Cable also addressed how the issue would affect landlords and their tenants.

Parliamentary under secretary of state, Iain Wright MP, responded to Mr Cable’s address saying that, with particular reference to buy-to-let, the government hoped to extend the notice which tenants were given when rental properties were repossessed.

Mr Cable was particularly interested in whether the government had accurate numbers for the measures brought in to help those with mortgages, most notably, the Homeowner Mortgage Support Scheme (HMSS) and changes to the Income Support for Mortgage Interest (ISMI) scheme.

He said: “Repossession is a tragedy for families because it usually involves not just the loss of a job but the loss of a home at the same time. It is a double tragedy.

“However, there are some less obvious reasons why repossession is a problem. It is a problem for society, particularly for local government, because of the pressure that it brings to bear on social housing. Over the past few weeks, there has been an upward revision in the number of people on waiting lists from 1.7 million to 2 million, so the pressure is clearly there.”

Mr Cable also spoke of the “vulnerable position” of tenants, who could find themselves homeless with very little warning, if their landlord’s property was repossessed.

He concluded his argument by saying: “If we add 9,000 and 6,000, which are the estimates so far in respect of the two main Government schemes, we are talking about 15,000 people, potentially, out of 75,000 people, which is an important figure but is still less than a quarter of those involved. That leads to the necessary conclusion that, even with these schemes in place, large numbers of people will be repossessed this year. That raises the question of where they will live.

Repossession is taking place in an environment where the provision of social housing is deteriorating. How far do the Government’s proposals match the severity and scale of the repossession crisis that we now face?”

Mr Wright responded to Mr Cable, explaining that families should not fear repossession. He said: “It is a major trauma that is, arguably, the biggest single difficulty that a person can face in their life. It affects people’s relationships, their health—particularly their mental health—their well-being and quality of life. Children can be uprooted from their school and adults from neighbours, friends and family. In the current challenging economic climate, more people are understandably worrying that they could lose their home.

“I want to reassure the House, and families throughout the country, that we are determined to help as much as possible. No household that experiences a temporary drop in income through no fault of its own, and which is willing to pay back what it can, should fear repossession.”

Mr Wright explained the necessity for the government to be flexible at this time, and also to receive feedback from their constituencies on how the new measures were working.

He added: “We are in the process of establishing a new scheme to help people who are having trouble making payments but are not eligible for ISMI—income support for mortgage interest. We have in mind families in which perhaps one person within a couple has lost their job or income or experienced a dramatic cut in overtime or payments. Applicants must have an outstanding mortgage of less than £400,000 and savings of less than £16,000. We estimate that this will take care of 98 per cent. of all mortgages.”

Prior to the debate at Westminster Hall today, Chris Cummings, director general of the Association of Mortgage Intermediaries, had prepared a briefing for Mr Cable.

Mr Cummings said: “We think it is of crucial importance that Sir James Crosby’s recommendations for temporary guaranteed securitisation are implemented as soon as possible by the government.

“We agree with his comments that ‘unless and until banks get access to attractively priced sources of funding the shortage of mortgage finance will endure’. AAA mortgage backed securities are still relatively safe and could actually be profitable for the government, but the cost of funding these instruments would be attractive to all banks so there would be no stigma in using them.”

This was found at: www.aboutproperty.co.uk

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