" Buy-to-let loans are set to get more expensive under global plans to crack down on the sector, amid fears of an unsustainable boom in the market.
Global officials at the Basel Committee, which sets financial standards for the whole world, want banks to hold twice as much capital against mortgages when the repayments are dependent on income from tenants, joining the Bank of England and the Treasury in warning of growing risks in the sector.
That is because such loans will only be repaid when the property is occupied and the landlord may struggle if tenants cannot be found.
It comes after Chancellor George Osborne announced another new tax on landlords, increasing stamp duty on the purchase of second homes and investment properties.
Under Basel Committee rules, banks have to apply a 35pc risk weighting to residential mortgage loans with a loan-to-value ratio of between 60pc and 85pc.
That measure defines how much capital a bank has to hold against the loan to make sure it can deal with a downturn in the economy when more loans migh not be paid back.
But the new plan would mean doubling that weighting to 70pc if the loan is dependent on rental income. This would, in turn, double the capital that would have to be held against the loan. Such a change would drive up the cost of lending and reduce the supply of buy-to-let mortgages for buyers.
This standard model applies to all banks except the very largest, which are allowed to use their own risk weightings if they have enough data to satisfy regulators that they understand the market fully. However, the wider tightening up on buy-to-let does still affect those giant lenders. "
Source: Global regulators join crackdown on buy-to-let - Telegraph
All responsible Govts of the world must eliminate this clear and present danger of funds diverted away from their pension Ponzi schemes
Global officials at the Basel Committee, which sets financial standards for the whole world, want banks to hold twice as much capital against mortgages when the repayments are dependent on income from tenants, joining the Bank of England and the Treasury in warning of growing risks in the sector.
That is because such loans will only be repaid when the property is occupied and the landlord may struggle if tenants cannot be found.
It comes after Chancellor George Osborne announced another new tax on landlords, increasing stamp duty on the purchase of second homes and investment properties.
Under Basel Committee rules, banks have to apply a 35pc risk weighting to residential mortgage loans with a loan-to-value ratio of between 60pc and 85pc.
That measure defines how much capital a bank has to hold against the loan to make sure it can deal with a downturn in the economy when more loans migh not be paid back.
But the new plan would mean doubling that weighting to 70pc if the loan is dependent on rental income. This would, in turn, double the capital that would have to be held against the loan. Such a change would drive up the cost of lending and reduce the supply of buy-to-let mortgages for buyers.
This standard model applies to all banks except the very largest, which are allowed to use their own risk weightings if they have enough data to satisfy regulators that they understand the market fully. However, the wider tightening up on buy-to-let does still affect those giant lenders. "
Source: Global regulators join crackdown on buy-to-let - Telegraph
All responsible Govts of the world must eliminate this clear and present danger of funds diverted away from their pension Ponzi schemes
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