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100% Mortgages make a return!

HOWEVER, the 100% mortgages are only offered by a single lender and you require very generous parents.

Mortgage loans that cover the whole valuation on a home return this week.

100% mortgages were axed when banks were criticised for selling ill advised loans – this move however caused significant problems for first time buyers who had depended on them to purchase without having an initial deposit.

In turn this forced soaring numbers to rent during a period when the cost of tenancies has reached an all-time high.

Yesterday, however, a lender called Aldermore said it is set to become the first bank since 2008 to offer 100% mortgages.

Set up in ’09, the bank promises ‘a fresh perspective’ on home mortgages. If successful, its pilot scheme could be cloned by competitors.

However, there is a substantial catch to acquire a 100% mortgage. Buyers require generous parents willing to place their home at stake to help their offspring.

For, if tragedy strikes, and the house is repossessed, the guarantors also face sacrificing the roof over their heads.

Charles Haresnape, managing director of residential mortgages at Aldermore, said: ‘First-time buyers are getting to be disenfranchised with the housing market because of the significant down payment asked by most lenders.

‘This is definitely the one biggest problem facing first-time buyers. This must be tackled directly if the UK’s housing sector is to have a chance of recovery.’

Young potential buyers are able to borrow 100% mortgages, with a maximum loan of £250,000, with out a downpayment.

However their parents need to provide as much as 25 per cent of the property’s price by putting up the family household as guarantee.

Step-parents, grandparents and legal guardians may become guarantors if they are prepared to take the risk.

In case the child winds up going through foreclosure, the parents or guardians would need to sell off their property or find another way of paying the financial debt.

The stop of 100% mortgages in The spring of  2008 coincided with a surge in the size of deposits demanded by banks after the recession hit in 2007.

The Aldermore package is available to all first-time potential buyers in England aged over 25, earning income greater than £10,000 in addition to a clean credit background. David Hollingworth, of mortgage loan experts London & Country, stated the promotions would appeal to mothers and fathers who possess a house but are not cash-rich.

‘It is for parents who do not necessarily have lots of cash but have built up significant equity in their household due to the increase in property values, which is just what is causing the predicament for their own kids,’ he stated.

However , Matt Griffith, from campaign group Priced Out, stated: ‘This package supports the two-tier property industry.

‘First-time consumers need, more than anything else, parents with major assets to gain access to the housing market – either to help out with a downpayment or to accept a certain amount of of the actual associated risk.

‘This offer illustrates exactly how divided the housing market place is for the majority of people.’

The 100% mortgages offered by Aldermore have an interest rate set for 3 years at 6.48 percent.

The duration can be up to 35 yrs however guarantors will just be trusted for the initial 10 years.