77.3% of Wembley Properties Were Bought With a Mortgage in the Last Ten Years

With Wembley homeowner’s mortgages at an all-time high, could the record levels of mortgages that Wembley people take out cause another property crash like they did in 2008/9? In this article I look at how Wembley people have been buying their houses and how exposed the Wembley property market is to rising interest rates.

77.3% of Wembley Properties Were Bought With a Mortgage in the Last Ten Years
Could the high levels of mortgages that Wembley people take out cause another property crash?
 
Many Wembley homeowners and landlords have been contacting me recently and asking what will happen to the Wembley (and the UK) property market? More specifically, will we have a repeat of the 2008/9 Credit Crunch property crash?
 
High mortgage payments were one of the critical catalysts to Wembley house prices dropping by between 16% and 19% (depending on the type of property) in just over one year in Wembley.
 
To answer that question, let me look at the mortgage numbers locally to see where we stand in the Wembley area.
 
17,722 of the 22,927 property sales in the last decade
in Brent were made with a mortgage.
 
77.3% of our local authority area house purchases have been made with a mortgage (meaning 22.7% are made with 100% cash).
 
Interesting, when compared with the national average of 67.4% of house purchases with a mortgage over the last decade.
 
However, what is thought-provoking is the number of house purchasers buying with a mortgage has steadily been increasing over the last decade.
 
Between 2012 and 2017, the percentage of people buying with a mortgage was 75.5%, yet over the last five years in Brent, that has risen to 81.5%.


 
 
Initially, this doesn't sound good. Yet, as always with my articles on the Wembley property market, the devil is always in the detail.
 
The issue is that most people need a mortgage to buy their home.
 
However, it’s not the amount of mortgage that is the issue, more the level of monthly payments. So, if you fix your mortgage rate, then your payments are fixed (a good idea especially as interest rates are on the rise).
 
In the last quarter, just under nineteen out of twenty (94.35%) of new borrowers that took out a mortgage had a fixed-rate mortgage at an average interest rate of 1.84%.

That’s good news for recent buyers as most of their payments won’t rise even though Bank of England interest rates have risen over the last few months. Yet it’s essential to see what existing homeowners with mortgages have done with their mortgage rates (i.e. fixed or not) as they form the bulk of the property market.
 
This is because in 2008/9 (the last crash), many people were unable to afford their high monthly mortgage payments when they were made redundant because interest rates were much higher. This meant many Wembley homeowners ‘dumped’ their houses onto the market, all in one go in 2008, because they couldn’t afford their high mortgage payments.
Also, the banks could not lend money for mortgages as easily because of the Credit Crunch, meaning fewer people could get a mortgage, so the demand for Wembley houses dropped as well.
 
In a nutshell, the number of Wembley properties on the market almost doubled overnight in 2008, yet demand plummeted as mortgages were hard to come by. High supply and low demand meant Wembley house prices nosedived in 2008/9.
 
Going into the Credit Crunch, one in six (60.4%) homeowners with a mortgage had a fixed rate at an average of 5.76%. By 2013, this had dropped to one in three people (33.29%) having a fixed-rate mortgage at an average of 3.34%.
 
Yet today, just under 17 out of 20 homeowners with a mortgage have a fixed rate at an average of 1.97%.
 
Whilst the country might owe collectively £1,630.5 billion in mortgages, irrespective of increasing rates, most homeowners have protected themselves with a low fixed interest rate.
 
Also, the overall ratio of mortgage debt in the UK, compared to the value of the homes the mortgages are lent on, is also low compared to the year before the last property crash. This ratio is called the Loan to Value ratio (LTV). The higher the LTV, the less equity the homeowner has in the property.
 
In 2007 (the year before the crash), only 49.4% of people had a mortgage less than 75% of the house's value (i.e. they had an LTV of less than 75%). Today that stands at 60.9%, which means more people have more equity in their property.
 
Another thought on why the country is in a better position is only 4.22% of mortgages have a 90% or higher LTV (compared to 16.28% just before the crash in 2007).
 
1 in 6 people were vulnerable to negative equity in the last property crash, whilst today that would only be 1 in 25.
 
This means if we do have another property market correction for any other reason ... the number of people in negative equity will be much smaller, so it won't affect the property market as much.
 
So, in conclusion, as we have fewer people with high LTV mortgages and fixed rates that are a third of what they were in the Credit Crunch, we are, as a country, in a better position to weather any storm.
 
If you would like any advice or opinion on the Wembley property market, be it buying or selling or anything to do with investing in the Wembley buy-to-let property market, don't hesitate to drop me a line.  

Get in touch with us

First Name*
Last Name*
Your Email Address*
Mobile Phone*
Are you looking to*
Please enter message here*
Please confirm that it is okay for us to contact you about this information as well as products and services. (You will always be given the right to unsubscribe at any point in the future)*

Register for Property Alerts

Ever missed out on the perfect property just because you heard about it too late, or the Estate Agent never told you about it as it was slightly outside of your criteria? Never miss out again by using our “Heads Up Property Alerts”.

Latest Properties

Charming 3 Bedroom House with Spacious Interiors and Off Street Parking in Wembley

Guide Price

£650,000

3 Beds1 Bath2 Receptions
The Dene Wembley Middlesex HA9 7QT

3 Bedroom Semi Detached House

Off Street Parking for 2 Cars

Large Through Lounge

Spacious 2 Bedroom Flat with Off Street Parking in Wembley - Perfect for Families or Investors

Guide Price

£380,000

2 Beds1 Bath1 Reception
Scarle Road, Wembley, Greater London, HA0 4SR

Off street parking - highly sort after this close to Ealing Road

Electrics checked in 2021 - valid until 2026

Good condition throughout - full refurb in 2016

2 bedroom apartment boasting a private roof terrace with stunning panoramic views on Popes

Guide Price

£590,000

2 Beds2 Baths1 Reception
Abelard Place Popes Lane South Ealing London W5 4BZ

Striking and Contemporary 2 Bedroom Apartment on Popes Lane in South Ealing

Built in 2015 in a striking small luxury mixed development of 3 houses and 2 apartments

Private roof terrace with motorised roof access providing 360 degree views of West London

Meet Abigail

  Hello, my name is Abigail, and I am the Grey in Grey & Co. I started working here in 2002 as a Junior Negotiator and have worked my way up the ranks since then. I took over running the company in 2014 and have been enjoying the roller coaster that is leadership ever since.   During my 20 plus years at Grey & Co I have dealt with the sale of over £100,000,000 worth of property and overseen the management of assets worth £250,000,000 for clients around the world.   I also had the pleasure of working with my father, the founder of Grey & Co, for 15 years before he sadly passed away and from him, I learnt the work hard ethic and our values today are still the ones that he founded the company on all those years ago.   Be Remarkable, Be Passionate, Be Humble and Be Better.   As a community centric boutique family agency, you couldn’t find a better partner to take with you on your property journey.

Meet All The Team

The Psychology of Successful Tenancies

How can you encourage tenants to settle long-term in your rental? A report compiled by consumer psychologists claims to have the answers.

January 2025 Property Market Update

Let's look at what's happening in the property market at the end of January 2025. And ask, is now a good time to buy or sell?

Cryptocurrency: Can You Use It When Buying or Selling?

Cryptocurrencies are said to be the currencies of the future. Here we’ll ask can you (and should you) buy or sell property using crypto?