Fri 11th Apr, 2008
Fall in number of insolvencies and repossession
Despite a large number of warnings that repossessions and insolvencies were on the rise as a result of higher interest rates and the fallout from the credit crunch, recently published figures actually show that the exact opposite has happened.
The figures which were released by the Insolvency Service show that 26,072 people were declared insolvent in the three months after the credit crunch hit. This is a fall of 3% on the number of insolvencies in the previous quarter and a fall of 5% of the same period the previous year.
While the number of bankruptcies had increased by 2.2% on 2006 to a total of 15,833, the number of individual voluntary arrangements (IVAs) was actually down by 14.3% to 10,239. The large drop in IVAs, which allow borrowers to write off some of their debt in return for creating a payment schedule with creditors, could be explained by the fact that most lenders dislike the schemes since they are then forced to write off bad debts. With banks needing to claw back as much money as they can, they are refusing to allow personal loan and credit card customers to ‘go bad’.
While it is not clear which lenders were behind the majority of rejections for IVAs it is believed that Northern Rock is on of the main contributors rejecting all applications for IVAs. This is unsurprising, given its recent history.
HSBC has also changed its policy to IVAs. In the past, repayments for IVAs came in somewhere around 25p for every £1 owed to the lender. HSBC has now upped its threshold to 40p for every £1 borrowed.
As a result of these changes borrowers are now more likely to enter into debt management plans with their creditors.