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The market bounces to boom time

After a crisis of confidence last year the buy to let market is booming again. Earlier fears that interest rates were rising and property values could crash are well behind us. So, fuelled by rising confidence and rising rental yields, landlords have been snapping up new properties and swapping to cheaper mortgage deals.

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On average, rental incomes increased by 3.3% in the three months to January whilst income as a percentage of the property's value - the rental yield - edged up to 6.45% from 6.42%. The ( life insurance ) latest report from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) shows that the number of buy to let mortgages increase by 39% in the second half of 2005 over the preceding six months whilst the value of these mortgages rose by 47%.

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Indeed, with expectations of steady increases in house prices, a glut of cheaper buy to let deals and a healthy demand from tenants, especially the first time buyers who remain priced out off the property ladder, we expect the boom to extend throughout 2006.

And mortgage lenders are happier too! Industry figures show that buy-to-let mortgages have become a safer bet than homeowner mortgages. According to the CML, the percentage of ( cheap secured loans ) buy-to-let mortgage in arrears is now lower than the figure for homeowner mortgages - and the arrears trend for buy-to-let is downwards whist it's upwards for homeowners.

The mortgage lenders have responded by relaxing some of their lending criteria and promoting aggressively again.

Historically, buy-to-let lenders have wanted monthly rental income to exceed 130% of mortgage payments - so if the mortgage was costing £1,000 per month, the rental value needs to exceed £1,300. ( motor insurance ) But now several lenders have relaxed this criteria. The reason's not just the market's lower risk profile. Over the last five years house prices have risen faster than rental income yields, making it more difficult for landlords to meet the 130% criteria. So now the lending average is closer to 125% whilst Northern Rock is happy to lend where the income simply equals the mortgage payment.

At the same time we have seen a trend for lenders to increase the percentage ( personal loans ) of the property value they will lend. Whilst 75% used to be the top level, the average is now 85% with Northern Rock lending up to 87% and GMAC stretching to 89%.

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