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Homeowners' mortgage borrowing up

Figures show an increase in homeowners' mortgage borrowing and loans approval Figures show an increase in homeowners' mortgage borrowing and loans approval

Figures show an increase in homeowners' mortgage borrowing and loans approval

Figures show an increase in homeowners' mortgage borrowing and loans approval




Homeowners' mortgage borrowing increased in September while the number of loans approved for house purchase also grew, figures have shown.

Net lending, which strips out redemptions and repayments, reached £922 million, according to the Bank of England, but the figure was weaker than August's revised £1.28 billion.

The number of mortgages approved for house purchase rose to 56,215 from the previous month's figure of 52,970, suggesting the recent improvement in the housing market will continue.

The figures show a downward revision of July's data, indicating that homeowners repaid £292 million more than was advanced in the month. This was the first time lending had been negative since the Bank began collecting data in its current format in 1993.

September's mortgage approval numbers are the highest since March last year.

But there was a further fall in the number of homeowners remortgaging, with those switching to a new deal dropping by 10% compared to August, to 25,528.

Overall lending through unsecured credit, such as credit cards, loans and overdrafts, was negative for the third month in a row.

Consumers repaid £262 million more than they borrowed through unsecured debt in the month.

Within this total, outstanding credit card debt rose by £79 million - a nine-month low - while money owed on loans and overdrafts fell by £341 million.

Analysts said that while the mortgage figures were positive, they should not be viewed as a sign that the housing market was out of the woods.


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