Generation Rent appeals to mortgage lenders not to evict tenants

Generation Rent appeals to mortgage lenders not to evict tenants

9:40 AM, 30th August 2023, About 9 months ago 30

Text Size

In a bid to safeguard tenants facing potential homelessness when a landlord falls into BTL mortgage arrears, one tenants’ rights group is urging mortgage lenders to uphold their ‘moral obligation’ not to evict tenants.

The call comes from Generation Rent and its chief executive, Ben Twomey, has written an open letter to the chief executives of four major mortgage providers.

In it, he urges them not to evict renters from properties owned by landlords who are struggling with defaulted mortgages.

The appeal comes as a response to the growing number of repossessions of landlords by lenders – a trend that looks set to grow in the coming months.

‘Severe consequences for the tenant’

With no wiggle room for landlords, Mr Twomey writes: “Eviction resulting from the actions of someone else is a very disruptive act with often severe consequences for the tenant that should be avoided wherever possible.

“It therefore seems likely that landlords behind on mortgage payments are at a higher risk of repossession and there is nothing their tenants can do about it.”

He adds: “I would like to know what your institution is doing to prevent tenants from losing their homes if their landlord is repossessed, and if you have a policy of acting as or appointing a receiver of rent to allow tenants to stay in their homes and carry on with their lives.”

Treasury agreement does not cover the buy to let market

Unlike the support extended to residential mortgage holders, the recent agreement established between the Treasury and lending institutions does not cover the buy to let market.

This gap leaves landlords with a BTL mortgage – and most of those are interest-only mortgages – vulnerable to arrears.

According to a recent report from UK Finance, the second quarter of this year saw the repossession of 440 buy to let properties.

And another 2,000 landlords fell more than 10% behind on their mortgage payments.

The figures underline the mounting pressure that landlords are under due to increasing interest rates.

‘Evict the tenant of homes they repossess from landlords’

Mr Twomey says: “We know that lenders have a right to evict the tenant of homes they repossess from landlords, using Section 21 or Section 8 Ground 2 of the Housing Act.

“A no-fault eviction results in stress for the tenant, particularly when rents have been rising as they have been.

“Finding a new, affordable place to live can drag tenants away from their workplaces, families and schools.”

2 million BTL mortgages currently active in the UK

There are around 2 million BTL mortgages currently active in the UK, according to UK Finance, but landlords are finding themselves in a tight financial position.

The Bank of England has estimated that by the end of 2025, up to 40% of these mortgages could potentially have payments that are 80% higher than the rental income received.

Mr Twomey’s open letter goes beyond an appeal for tenant protection and extends an invitation to mortgage providers to engage in discussions with Generation Rent.

The aim of these discussions would be to formulate effective measures to help shield renters from the loss of their homes – and boost their security in the current housing market turmoil.


Share This Article


Comments

Rerktyne

15:17 PM, 30th August 2023, About 9 months ago

What this country needs is mass evictions with people out on the streets: the perfect wake up call for all the bandwagonners who mindlessly attack all landlords as if they were disciples of Satan! Or, worse, Trump!
These people are too useless to actually find ways of housing people and so they simply dump it on the landlord: while the government then dumps on the landlord!
Morons!

Steve O'Dell

17:48 PM, 30th August 2023, About 9 months ago

What a joke, CEO of an 8 person organisation with £110k reserves - Generation Rent!
Does he not realise that these companies have responsibilities to their shareholders, many of whom are ordinary folk invested via pension funds. Why doesn't someone from Property118 invite him to a recorded debate to discuss this?

Route Meister

22:21 PM, 30th August 2023, About 9 months ago

Ohhh Ben, bless him, he'll grow up once he leaves school

Churchills Tax Advisers

22:35 PM, 30th August 2023, About 9 months ago

Do they have schools in alternative realities? If they do, they clearly do not teach economics or basic maths.

Dennis Leverett

22:51 PM, 30th August 2023, About 9 months ago

Could still be in his nappies, bless him.

GlanACC

8:18 AM, 31st August 2023, About 9 months ago

Happily mortgage companies have an obligation to recover as much money from the debtor (the morgage defaulter) as they can. They cannot 'come to a deal' with the tenant if it causes the mortgage debtor to receive less than could be obtained by an open sale. The mortgage company cannot charge the mortgage debtor for 'looking after' the tenant and keeping them in the property as they would be liable themselves.

Teessider

10:13 AM, 31st August 2023, About 9 months ago

The tenants could buy the property. Or maybe, Shelter and Generation Rent could do something useful and set up companies to buy repossessed properties. They could become the landlords.

No. I guess they don’t want to do that.

Martin Thomas

10:25 AM, 31st August 2023, About 9 months ago

I wonder what he has to say about landlords being repossessed because tenants haven't paid the rent.....

Hardworking Landlord

12:09 PM, 31st August 2023, About 9 months ago

I read the whole article in anticipation of his solution…

The Forever Tenant

12:47 PM, 31st August 2023, About 9 months ago

This was something that came up back in 2008, mostly in the US but still occured. There were a number of tenants where the landlords had their properties repossessed.

What those tenants were able to arrange was that they would stay in the property at a considerably reduced rent. The basic reason for doing so is that the property would then not be left empty for some time while it was being sold, if indeed it could be sold.

It's not without some precedence.

Leave Comments

In order to post comments you will need to Sign In or Sign Up for a FREE Membership

or

Don't have an account? Sign Up

Landlord Tax Planning Book Now