
Fewer than a quarter of mortgage brokers back plans for looser limits on mortgage lending, according to research by Landbay.
In a poll of brokers, only 23% said they think Chancellor Rachel Reeves is right to be rolling back post-financial crash red tape.
At her Mansion House speech to City of London grandees in July, Rachel Reeves set out a vision for Britain’s financial services industry based on a regulatory system geared towards growth rather than eliminating risk.
She plans to lift limits on mortgages, “simplifying responsible lending and advice rules for mortgages, supporting home ownership and opening a discussion on the balance between access to lending and levels of defaults”.
The Labour government is trying to bolster growth after the economy flatlined in the second half of last year. The Treasury has been at the heart of the government’s effort to push regulators to come up with growth-enhancing measures.
While roughly one in every six (16%) of brokers told Landbay that the reforms would represent a boost for first-time buyers, only one in 14 (7%) thought the reforms would kick-start growth.
“My greatest concern is we are regulated for risk whilst ignoring growth,” Reeves has said. “We need to make sure regulators are also taking into account the impact of their policies on growth — that is what we are determined to do as a reforming government.”
Three in every ten (30%) of the brokers that Landbay polled thought the reforms proposed by Reeves would lead to riskier loans.
However, almost half (47%) said the chancellor was merely “tinkering” with mortgage rules.
Rob Stanton, sales and distribution director at Landbay, said: "The chancellor says she plans to tear up “reams of financial red tape” and be “ruthless in slashing rules that make the UK uncompetitive”. But brokers aren’t quite so sure that looser mortgage lending rules will deliver that.
"While Rachel Reeves’ ambition is clear, our research shows brokers are cautious. Only a quarter of the brokers we polled support rolling back post-crisis regulations, with nearly half dismissing the changes as mere tinkering. At Landbay, we understand the need for growth, but striking the right balance between access to lending and managing risk is critical to avoid repeating past mistakes.”