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04 August 2008

Are you about to become NEGATIVE?

Negative Equity To Hit 1.7m UK Homeowners?

Wednesday 30th July 2008

One in seven UK homeowners may face the threat of negative equity throughout the next year as the UK housing market takes a stranglehold, according to a report conducted by Standard & Poor..
The world’s largest credit rating agency’s findings suggest that around 70,000 of the UK’s 12m borrowers currently find themselves in negative equity mainly due to house prices falling in value at an alarming 26%, leading to a further 14% of homeowners slipping into negative equity due to their outstanding mortgages.


Such depressing figures could replicate the dark days of the 1990’s housing crash, where huge numbers of home owners were left financially crippled due to house price declines. Never has establishing the best financial mortgage package been so imperative.
The 70,000 predicted to suffer is already a far larger sum than first envisaged and this figure is expected to rise further with the news that the house price slump has upped its speed, falling 9% on last year, judged on S&P’s Nationwide and Halifax figures.
The ratings agency calculated that for with every percentage point drop in house price from now on, around 60,000 to 80,000 borrowers could realistically enter the dreaded realms of negative equity, with the high loan-to-value mortgages most at threat.
While Standard & Poor’s report agreed that prices are currently heading in a downward direction, with a further 17% fall forecasted, many experts predict a more optimistic outlook with many home owners taking up a mortgage worth more than 90% of the value of their home, allowing the chances of going into negative equity slim, even if house prices fell a realistic 10%.
The report declared, “The current run of house price declines raises the prospect of negative equity for a large number of homeowners, a situation not seen since the 1990’s house price recession.”

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