How To Cope With Negative Equity


Updated on 16 December 2008 | 0 Comments

What can you do to protect yourself from a 1990s-style negative equity crisis?

This article was first sent to Fools as part of our 'The Good, The Bad and The Ugly' email series. 

Thanks to the credit crunch house prices are now falling. That could mean a return to a 1990s-style negative equity crisis. What can you do to protect yourself?

Negative equity means the outstanding mortgage on your home is higher than the value of the home. In other words, if you fall into negative equity, you'll owe your mortgage lender more than your home is actually worth.

Why is negative equity bad?

Negative equity becomes a problem when you want to sell your home or remortgage.

Selling your home

If you're in negative equity, moving up the property ladder to a larger home will be extremely difficult. That's because you don't have any equity in your current home to put down as a deposit on your next property.

Remortgaging

If you're coming to the end of your mortgage deal, it usually -- but not always -- make sense to remortgage so that you avoid your lender's standard variable rate (SVR). The SVR is normally the lender's highest mortgage rate.

But negative equity means it could be very difficult to find a willing lender. The credit crunch has led to the disappearance of 100% and 100% plus mortgages. That means you may be forced onto your lender's SVR with no option to go elsewhere.

Even if you manage to escape the negative equity trap and build up equity of say, 5% or 10%, you may still find your options on remortgaging are severely restricted as lending criteria tighten even more.

Should you be worried about negative equity?

That really depends on whether house prices continue to fall and by how much. When you bought your home, and how much you had to borrow also affects the risk of negative equity. If you bought your home several years ago, house prices will still be higher now than they were back then, so the risk of negative equity is lower.

If you had a large deposit initially, or you have plenty of equity, house prices will have to drop significantly before negative equity becomes a problem.

The group who are most at risk are those borrowers who bought recently at the top of the market with little or no deposit. On top of that, if they took out an interest-only mortgage without an investment plan to repay the capital, the threat is even greater because the mortgage debt stays the same.

That said, it's worth remembering that if house prices fell by 10%, around one in 75 houses face negative equity, according to research by the Financial Times. So most Fools probably won't be affected unless house prices really start to tumble.

What can you do to protect yourself from negative equity?

You might think because house prices are beyond your control, there isn't anything you can do to avoid the negative equity trap. But there are measures you can take:

On a final note, I don't want to spark mass panic. According to Halifax, house prices are currently 3.7% lower now than they were a year ago. They'll have to fall a lot further before negative equity becomes a widespread phenomenon.

If you need to remortgage, speak to a broker at The Motley Fool's award-winning Mortgage Service.

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