Housing

Mortgage certificate idea suggested

5 April 2008

Lenders should provide buyers with a certificate stating the amount they will lend and on what terms, it has been claimed.

Mike Ockenden, director-general of the Association of Home Information Pack Providers (AHIPP), believed that the way forward for the market was for buyers to have a certificate stating the mortgage they have secured and how much they borrow.

Ockenden said: “There should be a move to create a system for buyers that when they confirm the finance they are getting they get a document confirming it. This will allow the estate agent to accept the offer and make the process much easier.”

James Scott-Lee, residential estate agency chair for the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, agreed it could work but questioned the policing of it.

“This is a laudible idea but the reality is that it is a serious amount of the responsibility can be put upon the buyer and I don’t think it’s completely workable. What if the buyer is unable to produce this document, will it be deemed a criminal act?”

However the idea was dismissed by Ray Boulger, senior technical manager at John Charcol. He claimed that it was ‘impractical idea’ due to current conditions.

Boulger said: “That is worth little in the current market as a lender could offer 95 per cent loan-to-value which will be reduced to 75 per cent within a week. So it does have a benefit but when you find a property you may use a different lender and the paper would only be valid for that time. Equity circumstances may change too.”

Would you like to add your own view?
Your email address
Your comment
Please enter the characters you see on the screen