Category: Top » Finance » Real-estate »


Author: tugsearch | Total views: 21 Comments: 0
Word Count: 927 Date: Fri, 24 Apr 2009 1:53 PM

Mortgage Support scheme finally launched for Homeowners

A long-awaited taxpayer-backed scheme to help recession-hit families avoid having their

homes repossessed will come into force today, on the eve of the Budget. As a result

some hard-pressed homeowners will be able to reduce monthly mortgage payments for up to

two years after lenders representing what officials said was more than 80% of the

market agreed to offer support.

The mortgage lenders listed below have agreed to offer help to their customers through

HMS:

* Bradford and Bingley
* Cumberland Building Society
* Lloyds Bank Group, including Halifax and Bank of Scotland
* National Australia Bank Group, including Clydesdale Bank and Yorkshire Bank
* Northern Rock
* Royal Bank of Scotland, including NatWest and Ulster Bank

A number of other banks, building societies and specialist lenders will be offering HMS

to their customers as soon as possible. These include:

* Bank of Ireland, including Bristol and West
* GE Money
* GMAC
* Kensington Mortgages
* the Post Office
* Standard Life Bank

One recent survey showed as many as 35% of people were worried to some degree about

losing their homes and the Government has faced criticism for delays in implementing

the scheme, first announced in December.

The Homeowners Mortgage Support (HMS) scheme is designed to offer "breathing space" to

households who have seen their income cut because of losing a job or being forced to

cut working hours as the recession bites.

Any reduction will have to be made up once the period is over.

It was unclear last night how many lenders offering help were doing so as part of the

Government scheme - with a guarantee backed by the taxpayer - and how many were

offering "comparable arrangements".

But officials insisted both would offer "a similar level of support" and those on

individual schemes would be offered the kind of "independent money advice" that would

be a requirement for the state-backed one.

The HMS provisions are restricted to owner occupiers who bought properties before

December last year, owe less than £400,000 on the mortgage and have savings of less

than £16,000.

They must also have a regular household income, have not missed any payments for five

months and be able to pay at least 30% of the total interest payment due every month.

The scheme, which received European Commission approval under state aid rules

yesterday, has already been criticised following claims that it may help only 6,000

people, while concerns have also been expressed that it will simply defer a

'repossessions spike' until 2011.

Mr Darling addressed the private weekly meeting of Labour MPs and peers in Parliament

last night, telling them his Budget would focus on jobs and looking to the future of

the economy.

The Chancellor was warned by the respected Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) yesterday

that his plans to raise taxes for top earners would probably generate only a third of

the £1.6billion that he is expecting.

Mr Darling is widely expected to announce a further £10 billion in Whitehall efficiency

savings - on top of the £5 billion already pencilled in - as he attempts to get the

public finances back on track.

But voters appeared to have lost faith in his handling of the economy as a new opinion

poll showed the Tories had moved into a 10-point lead (35% to 45%) on the key issue.

It is a significant reverse for Mr Darling and Prime Minister Gordon Brown who enjoyed

a seven-point lead over counterparts George Osborne and David Cameron on the same

indicator at the start of last year.

Speaking to the BBC, Mrs Beckett insisted the scheme was not a "payment holiday" and

would offer temporary help to hard-pressed home-owners.

She said: "The idea is to try and help people who haven't lost everything and who

aren't going to be eligible, if they are unfortunate enough to have their house

repossossed, to be rehoused under homeless legislation, but whom nevertheless are

having difficulties.

"Maybe one of them has lost their job but not both, maybe it is just that they have

lost their overtime, but one way or another they are struggling with the mortgage

payments that they could meet before."

She added: "Hopefully this difficulty is somewhat temporary. This is not a payment

holiday, people do need to go on paying as much as they can from their mortgage.

"The really crucial thing is to talk to their lender as soon as possible and to get

independent financial advice."

Shadow housing minister Grant Shapps said: "Gordon Brown claimed that hard-pressed home

owners would get mortgage help back in December, but since that time over 28,000

families have lost their homes.

"It's outrageous to announce schemes which promise immediate help, yet take five months

to put in place. Brown should apologise to those whose hopes were raised, only to have

them dashed by ministers' inactivity."

About the Author

Commercial property for sale or rent

in the UK - find lettings, investment property and commercial property agents with

ukbusinessproperty.co.uk




Rate, comment or bookmark this article

Seed Newsvine

Rating: Not yet rated

Bookmark this article in your preferred program
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Comments RSS

No comments posted.

Add Comment

Your Name:


Your Email:


Comment

Enter the code shown

Visual CAPTCHA



Popular Articles in this cathegory

1: First Things First . . . Why Apartment Buildings?
Apartment investments provide low risk compared to residential investing. A $250,000 home can rent up to $2500 a month. While a $250,000 10 unit apartment building at $500 per unit can rent for $500..

2: Hey Contractors, How To Fill Out Aia Pay Apps - Part 1
If we grabbed the first 10 small subcontractors you crossed paths with and tested them on filling out AIA pay applications, 7 or more would probably fail the test At least, that's about the error rate I've seen while reviewing pay applications

3: Deficiency Judgment After Foreclosure? Is It Likely The Lender Will Sue You
Depending on the foreclosure laws in your state lenders may have the right to sue you for a foreclosure deficiency. Will a lender sue you for a foreclosure deficiency? A concern for many that are facing a foreclosure, but is it likely that the lender will sue you?

4: How To Pool Lender Money To Fund Your Real Estate Deals
When a good real estate deal comes my way, I can grab it because I know the money is waiting for me. While my competitors are scrambling around applying at the bank, I've made an offer and closed the deal. Private lenders make it all possible and this article tells why.

5: Getting Out Of Trouble!
When a good real estate deal comes my way, I can grab it because I know the money is waiting for me. While my competitors are scrambling around applying at the bank, I've made an offer and closed the deal. Private lenders make it all possible and this article tells why.


Creative Commons License
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Spanish taslation