ASTL cuts membership fees
The Association of Short Term Lenders has cut £1,000 off its membership fees bringing them down to £4,000 a year.
Adrian Bloomfield, chief executive of the ASTL, said the lender trade body was able to put its fees down because more members had signed up last year, bringing the total to 27.
He said: “We’ve done well to attract 27 members and our achievement as a trade body for the short-term lending sector has been remarkably good.
“There are people clamouring for us to do more and we would agree. More activity requires more money and more members, and progress is being made on this.
“We are an accountable trade body now and we represent enough of the industry that bodies such as the Financial Services Authority are happy to meet with us.”
Bloomfield said the ASTL was proud to have grown by such an extent in the four years since it was set up in 2008.
“We were set up at the worst possible time for being a lender in the middle of the credit crunch and at one time we were down to just 12 members,” he added.
“But this is an innovative market and it is most praiseworthy that our members have got back on their feet and made such a success.”
Bloomfield added that he believed there could be up to 100 short-term lenders active in the market though it was impossible to confirm this.
Some lenders are private individuals arranging transactions independently with developers and brokers.
Bloomfield said the ASTL had spoken to around 15 lenders who had decided not to become members “for some reason or other”.
- Insurers may ditch flood risk properties
- Scotland has UK's most affordable housing
- SME confidence crashed at end of 2011
- Self build lending set for 141pc growth
- Phony lord busted for mortgage fraud
- UK inflation falls to 4.2pc
- DCLG: House prices dropped 0.3pc in Nov
- Fraudster forced to hand over properties
- Cambridge overhauls product range
- Borro rules out IPO for 2 years
- Crown receives S&P ratings upgrade
- Hinckley & Rugby cuts lifetime rates
- Skipton cuts rates by up to 0.4pc
- CML praises MMR but much more to do
- Shapps: State to help downsize elderly homes
- Second charge lender offers 75pc LTV loans





