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Feb
27

Northern Rock gets mortgage lending back on a roll

February 27, 2009    Posted in: Debt News
Nationalised bank Northern Rock will receive a £10 billion boost in taxpayers’ money in a bid to offer financial help to the mortgage market. The bank which collapsed in 2007 when a government bailout prompted many of its savers to withdraw their funds, will radically change its lending policy in order to provide up to an additional £5 billion in new home loans. The bank has been heavily criticised for its past lending policies, including permitting potential homeowners to borrow up to 125% of their prospective property under its ‘Together’ mortgage deal. Currently, the average applicant will only receive around 80% loan to value on the property they are purchasing, meaning that buyers have to pay a deposit of around 20% on their new home. However, Northern Rock plans to start offering mortgages of up to 90% in the hope that it will stimulate the lending market and help more people in the UK onto the property ladder. To fund this new venture, the Treasury has committed an extra £10 billion, generated from UK taxes, to Northern Rock in the hope that maintained lending by the bank will help it to repay its debts to the government. Northern Rock borrowed £27 billion in government funds during its collapse, £18 billion of which it has since paid back. Senior staff at Northern Rock will not receive cash bonuses this year and their pay will be frozen at 2008 levels as part of plans to bring the bank back into shape.
February 27, 2009    Posted in: Debt News

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