Inter Financial Weblog

 

Archive for Consumer Credit

HIPs compounding problems

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

A report into home information packs (HIPs) by Birmingham Trading Standards has reached pretty damning results.

The packs have not only been slammed as useless, misleading and uninformative, they have also been credited with worsening the housing market situation. Many believe that the added cost of the packs is putting off both buyers and sellers in a market already rocked by the credit crunch.

Many of the packs examined had fundamental errors which could lead to house sales falling through or purchasers only discovering too late down the line that they had been misled.

Omissions were made in areas such as planning permissions and planning history and whether houses were in conservation areas. Whether these errors were made by poor training of HIPs officers or by fundamental flaws in the system was not explained by the report, but neither makes comfortable reading for homeowners or potential buyers.

In a market already suffering due to the lack of home loan availability and with many worried about falling house prices, lack of confidence in HIPs creates a further burden for those buying and selling.

It is unfair to homeowners who are trying to sell that they are unwittingly attempting to sell their home on a false basis and equally wrong that those who are both investing equity and saddling themselves with a massive loan for are buying something that is not what they were led to believe.

How to Finally be a First Time Buyer

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

The house price crash is proving to be a boon for many potential first time buyers. Those who have waited for years, ever-frustrated as house prices have rocketed beyond their reach are at last seeing a chance to buy.

With house prices having fallen eleven months in a row (according to figures from Nationwide), buyers poised to step on that first rung are waiting in the wings. So what are market conditions really like?

Well, according to the financial papers, prices are set to still fall, which is why many potential buyers are still holding back.

This may be bad news for those desperate to sell, but for those looking to finally be handed the keys to their own home, the news is great.

Many of these would-be purchasers have been saving up for years, watching prices soar further and further beyond their reach. Provided that they haven’t given up and dipped into their funds, they could be on track to buying their dream home in the next year.

One of the only dampeners that buyers should be aware of is the difficulty right now in getting a loan. Existing home loan borrowers have an easier time, should they find a buyer, as they have a proven credit record on their side and probably a chunk of equity in their property.

Lenders are now asking for as much as 25% deposit – compared to the 100% or even 125% loans that were being offered when prices were still rocketing. Unless you have a good credit record and a hefty chunk of savings, your dream property might not be as close as you think.

So, potential buyers could be wise to use their credit cards and take out cheap personal loans – provided always that they make repayments promptly. By building up a good credit record before they look at getting their home loan, they stand a great chance of getting that mortgage approval they need.

What affects your credit rating

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

There’s a lot of confusion about credit ratings amongst people seeking personal loans and other forms of credit.

Many people believe – wrongly – that a credit record shows whether a lender has refused credit. This is not the case. Every time you apply for credit a ‘footprint’ is created on your credit record to show other financiers what you have been up to, but no record is immediately made as to whether you took up an offer, or whether it was refused.

One thing that varies from lender to lender is ‘how much is too many?’ Most of us are familiar with the concept that lenders looking at a credit record showing multiple applications may – quite rightly – view this as a sign of someone desperately seeking credit. As this is rarely the sign of a good potential client, many lenders will turn this applicant down on principal.

But how much is ‘too many’ when it comes to applications. Lenders will obviously vary, according to their criteria, but a flag usually goes up if more than four applications have been made at any one time. If the applications are spread across a period of months, the lender will be more lenient.
Another factor that people misunderstand about their credit rating is how much stability affects their core rating.

When you apply for credit – be it a mortgage, a credit card or a personal loan – the lender wants to know more than anything that you will be able to repay. The greater the risk perceived, the higher the interest rate charged, which is why bad credit loans can be so expensive.

Factors affecting this can be whether you are married – a sign of committment – whether you are registered as a voter, how many times you have moved house and even how many times you have moved job.

Someone who is seen as high risk is not necessarily someone with a history of missed repayments and ccjs, but maybe someone who has jumped from job to job, moved house or town many times and generally shown a lack of stability.

So, if you’re wondering why you weren’t offered the best rates available on the loan you wanted, you may need to look deeper than you thought.