Northern Rock, Yet More of Your Cash Down the Drain
Sep 2nd, 2008 | By David Stevenson | Category: International InvestingNow here’s a big shock. It turns out that British taxpayers could end up shelling out even more for Northern Rock than we were all told was on the cards.
Turns out – would you believe – that the Newcastle-based lender, a pioneer of 125% mortgages and one of the most dominant lenders right at the peak of the market in early 2007, is getting clobbered by much higher-than-average default rates. Surprise, surprise!
Sarcasm aside, the Rock is just the tip of the iceberg, if you’ll forgive the slightly mangled metaphor. The rest of the UK banking system, or certainly the bit that isn’t effectively bust already, is getting set to slam down the loan window shutters as it runs shorter and shorter of money.
It all promises to be a very unhappy 2009 for borrowers…
Northern Rock is suffering much higher-than-average default rates
There’ve been probably more column inches within the last year devoted to the sorry Northern Rock nationalisation saga than to any other company in the country, so I’m not going to add to them by talking about the right and wrongs of what the financial authorities did or didn’t do.
We’re stuck with it. But if anyone’s looking for any further evidence that offering 125% mortgages is a completely brainless idea, particularly if the lenders responsible proceed to scatter their cash around like confetti, the latest news serves that up on a plate.
It turns out that from what The Telegraph calls “previously unseen documents” that Granite, the £40bn so-called ‘off-balance sheet securitisation vehicle’ which holds many of the mortgages issued by the Crock, is anything but rock-solid.
Payment arrears of 90 days or more on mortgages on Granite’s books rocketed by two-thirds between this year’s first and second quarters, according to the credit monitors at Standard & Poor’s. That adds up to £508m-worth of dodgy home loans, even though rival banks saw relatively small increases in delinquencies. What’s more, repossessions soared by 163% between the first and second quarters, again much worse than virtually every other lender.
The loan-to-value (LTV) ratio is another potential disaster. Average LTVs were 77% for Granite compared with 60% typically elsewhere, with almost 30% of Granite’s loans at LTVs of 90%. That means a large chunk of borrowers will soon be dropping into negative equity territory as the housing market gets worse.
Today’s Nationwide survey said that UK home values have already plunged 10.5% over the last year after a further 1.9% fall in August, while the Bank of England’s governor Mervyn King this month forecast “a significant adjustment” downwards in house prices.
Source: Northern Rock, Yet More of Your Cash Down the Drain
David Stevenson joined MoneyWeek as Associate Editor in May 2008. Having started a career in the City with Morgan Grenfell, David joined Oppenheimer as a fund manager in 1983, starting on the UK desk before managing the European fund in 1986. He has subsequently managed equity portfolios for Hill Samuel, Cigna and Lloyds TSB subsidiary IAI International, and has worked as an analyst for stockbroker BNP Securities. After a brief period running his own business, David then returned to the financial world in 2007 as investment writer for the Motley Fool.