Review of the short-term sector
The bridging market has changed a lot over the past decade. No longer is the dominant model to have a number of private individuals funding short-term development projects, underwritten on a case by case basis and priced typically at between 1.5 and 2 per cent a month. A consistently low base rate, a drop in residential transactions and a tougher consumer mortgage market have all conspired to bring a marked increase in institutional funding to the bridging sector. Following the worst of the crash, a number of new lenders with experience of residential regulated lending entered the short-term sector, backed by international private equity money and in search of the higher returns it offered. To a large extent , these entrants have contributed to cleaning the wilder edges of the market up. They have put pressure on pricing, to the benefit of borrowers, all but wiped out the worst of the in/out charges that were regularly slapped on deals and brought a more consistent approach to underwriting deals.
Why it matters
How it applies
Key takeaway
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