A surge in consumer credit growth and the prospect of faster-than-expected interest rate rises have recently prompted concerns about the possibility of a fresh debt-bust in the UK, but it is the continuing overhang from the last crisis that is of more concern, according to a new Resolution Foundation report published today. With levels of…
Read moreDuring 2017, 22,763 debt decrees were registered against Scottish consumers, nine percent more than in the previous year according to latest figures by The Registry Trust. The combined value of all consumer decrees was £64m, just two percent higher than 2016. The mean average value of a consumer decree decreased seven percent. Dropping 10 percent,…
Read moreA drop in the average UK house price of the scale seen in the last financial crisis would put nearly half a million households at risk of negative equity according to analysis by third-party mortgage servicer Computershare. Computershare has forecast that the value of 4.12% of properties – or approximately 458,000 households – would drop…
Read moreNew figures released by the Finance & Leasing Association (FLA) show that new business volumes in second charge mortgages continued to grow in 2017. Commenting on the 2017 new business figures for the second charge mortgage market, Fiona Hoyle, Head of Consumer and Mortgage Finance at the Finance & Leasing Association (FLA), said “Second charge…
Read moreNew figures released by the Finance & Leasing Association (FLA) show that new business volumes in the point of sale (POS) consumer car finance market in 2017 were at a similar level to 2016, while the value of new business was up by 6% over the same period. New business in December 2017 fell 2%…
Read moreNew figures released by the Finance & Leasing Association (FLA) show growth of 6% in consumer finance new business in 2017. New business in December 2017 increased by 1% compared with the same month in 2016. Credit card and personal loan new business together grew by 6% in 2017, while retail store and online credit…
Read moreLatest figures from UK Finance have revealed that the number of home-owners’ properties being repossessed fell to a 36-year low last year. In 2017, 4,700 owner-occupied mortgaged properties were repossessed – down from 5,300 in 2016. Meanwhile, the number of landlords behind on mortgage payments has risen by 20%, with 1,200 buy-to-let mortgages in “significant…
Read moreNew figures released by the Finance & Leasing Association (FLA) show that the number of second charge mortgage repossessions in 2017 was 105, 27% lower than in 2016. In the final quarter of 2017, the number of repossessions was 27, down by almost 31% compared with the same period in 2016. The rate of second…
Read moreThe number of debt judgments recorded in the Four Courts of Ireland fell to a historic low during 2017, according to figures released today by Registry Trust. There were 2,157 judgments registered against consumers in 2017, two percent fewer than the previous year and a record low. The mean average consumer judgment’s value fell 11…
Read moreBritish consumers are increasingly struggling to cope under an ever-growing mountain of credit card debt, according to new research by the New Economics Foundation (NEF) think-tank. Using data from the Financial Conduct Authority, R3 and its own modelling, NEF finds that credit card debt is increasingly becoming as unmanageable as payday lending debt was for…
Read moreNew data research by onefourzero and GK analysing the credit market has found that consumers now use debt to maintain their spend power. The report analysed demand data for credit cards and overdrafts, and found that reliance on consumer credit has become the new normal; British consumers are borrowing more now than ever before. What was…
Read moreOfgem has launched an investigation into the consumption information that Ovo Energy gave some of its customers. This includes the estimates the supplier gave customers about how much energy they used during winter 2016-17 and the accuracy of the annual consumption figures that it gave to customers in their annual statements. The investigation will examine…
Read moreToday marks the start of a UK rule change required by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) as part of its Retail Banking Investigation which means that banks must now set up an alert system which will help their customers avoid unnecessary charges. During an investigation, the CMA found that banks receive around £1.2 billion a…
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