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Adverse Credit Mortgages - How 'adverse' is adverse?


Over 5% of total mortgage lending in 2005 was probably "adverse credit" lending to people with previous credit problems, making bad credit mortgages the largest specialist sector after buy-to-let, according to new data published by the Council of Mortgage Lenders.

Defining the size and scope of the adverse credit mortgage market is complex because there are no standard definitions in use across the industry. However, the CML says it has chosen to echo the Financial Services Authority's definition of an adverse credit history. On this basis which excludes the relatively new "near prime" lending now being undertaken by some lenders, the CML has used data from its regulated mortgage survey to find that nearly half of adverse credit lending is to people in the less serious "low adverse" category, and less than a quarter is "high adverse" .

Meanwhile, four fifths of adverse credit mortgages are sold through intermediaries, compared to less than 60% of non adverse credit mortgages.

Two thirds of adverse credit mortgages are remortgages - compared to about half of non adverse credit mortgages. And remortgagers with adverse credit histories are unsurprisingly more likely to borrow more than their previous mortgage to consolidate other debts than their counterparts with non adverse credit.

Compared with non adverse mortgage, borrowers with an adverse credit history are a little older, more likely to be self-employed, and more likely to have mortgage debt payments that are a relatively high percentage of their income.

Although arrears and possessions are higher in the adverse sector than in the prime market, for many borrowers adverse credit lending represents a way of rehabilitating their finances after a period of financial difficulty.

Independent research showed that 30% of non-conforming borrowers thought their credit standing had improved since taking out their adverse credit mortgage, compared with 8% who felt it had got worse, suggesting that a material degree of credit rehabilitation does occur.

Adverse credit underwriting systems are more likely than prime lending to include credit scoring models, but a higher proportion of adverse credit loan applications will be subject to manual underwriting. The borrower's income and behavioural indicators, as well as past credit history, will be important factors in determining how much to lend.

Loan-to-value ratios on adverse credit lending are often higher than for non adverse mortgage loans, so providing little support for the view sometimes expressed that lenders rely on un-mortgaged equity to mitigate credit risk.

Typical income multiples are broadly similar to non-adverse loans, but the distribution is different and a greater proportion of adverse credit mortgage borrowers have debt payments that are a relatively high percentage of income.

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2007-01-24 16:31:25 © Moneyextra.com


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