Lenders advanced £2bn to landlords in July, an 11% increase on the £1.8bn advanced in June, according to new monthly buy-to-let data published by the Council of Mortgage Lenders. The £2bn advanced in July is made up of £900m for house purchase – with the number of loans totaling 7,600 loans – and £1.1bn in remortgage lending, totaling 7,200 loans.
The number of loans for house purchase in July was 6.7% up on the 7,120 loans advanced in July, while gross lending for house purchase was up 12.5% on the £800m advanced the month before. The number of loans for remortgage purposes was up 13.4% up on the 6,350 loans advanced in July, while gross lending was up 23.6% on the £890m advanced in June.
This is the first time the CML has published buy-to-let lending on a monthly basis, as it previously only published buy-to-let data on a quarterly basis.
Online letting agent Rentify chief executive George Spencer says: “Landlord optimism is at its highest level in several years, thanks to strong rental yields, low mortgage rates and the general recovery in the housing market. Both experienced and novice investors alike are taking the plunge and expanding portfolios or getting into buy-to-let for the first time, while there is strong growth in buy-to-let remortgaging as existing landlords take advantage of ultra-low rates.”
Last month the CML published an estimate of residential gross lending, in which it said lenders had advanced £16.7bn to borrowers, its highest level since October 2008 and a 29% increase on the previous July. The trade body then provides a detailed breakdown of gross lending within weeks of publishing its estimate.
Today’s breakdown shows lenders advanced £3.5bn to first-time buyers in July, up 45.8% on the £2.4bn advanced in July 2012. The number of loans advanced to first-time buyers in July totaled 25,300, up 40.6 per cent on the 18,000 advanced a year ago. The typical first-time buyer’s loan size was £117,038 in July, up from £110,000 a year ago, while the average income of first-time buyers increased from £34,936 in July 2012 to £36,142 in July this year.
Affordability for first-time buyers improved from June to July, with the average income multiple falling from 3.33 to 3.31. However, on an annual basis loans were less affordable for borrowers, with the average income multiple being 3.24 times the typical borrower’s income in July last year.