Graduate mortgage lenders run risk, IFA says

August 15, 2007 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Mortgages

Those lenders who allow recent graduates to take out mortgages with them do so at their own risk, Balmoral Associates said today.

The independent financial advisor said that the mortgages, which typically lend at five to six times salary under the assumption that wages will increase over the years, were not “very common”.

Director at Balmoral Associates Paul Monk also took care to distinguish them from 100 and 110 per cent mortgages, saying that the graduate loans were aimed at those who had read a “professional course like medicine or law” and whose “salary is going to increase dramatically over a short space of time”.

Given that a proportion of graduates will remain on similar wages after some years, however, Mr Monk added that “the lender’s taking a big risk” in offering the service.

“The lender’s banking on the fact that because of the sort of job you’re in that that is automatically going to happen but it’s not always the case,” he added.

Mr Monk also commented on the recent US sub-prime mortgage crisis, saying that the UK market might “tighten up” on lending, with recent graduates among the first to feel the squeeze.

Tags: service."The lender banking, salary, time, recent graduates, medicine, law, market

Related Entries

  • Mortgage lenders ‘targeting better qualified people’
  • The mortgage crunch has prompted mortgage lenders to target "better qualified people and lower risk people", according to industry experts. FirstRungNow.com said that products such as guarantor, professional, joint and graduate mortgages are now "coming
  • Student finances not ‘greatly’ affected by credit crunch
  • The National Union of Students (NUS) has announced that finances for this year's intake of students were not 'greatly' affected by the credit crunch. A spokesman for the NUS said that there has been little
  • New graduate deals from RBS
  • This year's set of graduates are being offered £2,000 interest-free by the Royal Bank of Scotland so that the pressure is off somewhat during their first three years of work. Nicknamed the Graduate Royalties offer,
  • Graduates ’shouldn’t have any trouble getting credit’ despite economic turmoil
  • Despite tighter lending conditions created by the global credit crunch, graduates should not have any trouble in getting credit, one financial expert has claimed. Moneyfacts said that lenders consider different factors when dealing with graduates
  • Fewer mortgage lenders willing to offer £1m deals, says expert
  • Homebuyers looking to spend in excess of £1 million on a property may have difficulty finding a large mortgage to fund their purchase, according to Bestinvest. The head of mortgages at the company, Peter O'Donovan, has
  • Students protest against HSBC
  • Students in the UK have launched a protest against one of the UK's leading banks, HSBC, and the protest has been quickly gaining popularity through the Facebook website. Students are now threatening to boycott HSBC
  • Lenders to start withdrawing 100% mortgage deals
  • Following the withdrawal of 125 per cent mortgage deals, many lenders are beginning to remove 100 per cent deals too, one finance expert has claimed. Moneyfacts.co.uk has said that 100 per cent mortgage deals are
  • Parents forking out for offspring debt
  • Some 7.5 million parents are having to financially support their adult children, new research has found.A MoneyExpert survey found that 40 per cent of parents with adult children have to help out with debt problems,

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!