Economic news

UK Mortgage Approvals Rise by most since November, BoE says

  • UK lenders approve most mortgages since November 2025
  • Consumer borrowing rises at fastest pace since March 2024
  • Concerns about the Iran war likely to weigh ​on housing market

LONDON, March 30 (Reuters) - British lenders last month approved the most mortgages ‌in three months and consumer credit grew at the fastest pace in nearly two years, Bank of England data showed on Monday ahead of a potential hit from higher borrowing costs caused by the Iran war.

The BoE said ​62,584 new mortgages for house purchase were approved in February, up from 60,246 in ​January. Economists polled by Reuters had pointed to 61,250 approvals during the month.

The ⁠value of mortgage lending, which lags behind approvals, rose by the biggest amount since September - up ​4.840 billion pounds ($6.41 billion) in net terms in February following a rise of 4.2 billion pounds ​in January.

The BoE data contrasted with more recent signs of caution in the housing market. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said demand faded in a survey that covered the start of the conflict as buyers worried about the ​implications of the Middle East conflict.

Matt Swannell, chief economic adviser to the EY ITEM Club, said ​that the BoE's figures reflected an unwinding of weakness in previous months and that a sharp jump in lenders' ‌financing ⁠costs since the outbreak of the war was set to push up mortgage rates.

The BoE's measure of net consumer borrowing rose by 1.935 billion pounds in February, more than the 1.6 billion-pound forecast in the Reuters poll of economists.

The increase was above January's 1.828 billion-pound rise, taking the annual rate ​of consumer credit growth ​to 8.5%, its fastest ⁠since March 2024.

The annual growth rate of the M4 money supply excluding non-bank financial institutions - which some economists see as a factor driving medium-term ​inflation - increased to 3.9% in February from 3.6% in January.

But Paul Dales, ​chief UK economist ⁠at Capital Economics, said this still represented a relatively subdued growth rate ahead of the outbreak of the Iran war, suggesting "the burst of inflation triggered by higher energy prices is more likely to be ⁠short-lived than ​long-lasting".

House prices were also likely to rise less this year ​than the 3.5% increase which Capital had previously forecast, Dales said, pointing to a rise in two-year fixed rates for ​mortgages to 4.8% from 4.0% before the conflict.

($1 = 0.7556 pounds)

Reporting by Suban Abdulla; editing by David Milliken

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree