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06 June 2012

ECON Committee: Parliament moves to help home owners with their mortgages


MEPs are pushing the finance industry to provide borrowers with high-quality advice about the risks involved in loans, which would make mortgage lending sounder and more transparent.

The overheated real estate market was what sparked the economic crisis in many countries. Blinded by the availability of cheap credit, many borrowers took out mortgages they could not possibly repay. That is why MEPs are pushing the finance industry to provide borrowers with high-quality advice about the risks involved in loans, which would make mortgage lending sounder and more transparent.

Importance of the EU mortgage market

The EU mortgage market is of crucial importance to the economy. In 2009, residential mortgage lending in the EU amounted to just over €6 trillion, which is equivalent to 52 per cent of the EU's gross domestic product. Home ownership in the EU is close to 70 per cent.

The EP's economic and monetary affairs committee will on Thursday 7 June vote on a report on how to improve residential mortgage lending, prepared by the Spanish Social-Democrat, Antolín Sánchez Presedo.

Why changes are needed

In a previous interview, Mr Sánchez Presedo pointed to the key role the mortgage market played in the current crisis: "Over-indebtedness is still at the centre of the crisis. Regulating mortgage markets would be an important first step to fight this." In his report he focuses on ways to make the mortgage market more robust. "I want to identify risky products and to give power to supervisory authorities to impose extra measures including consumer warnings and stricter prudential requirements so that those taking greater risks also bear the potential costs of those risks."

What is being proposed

The report contains a number of recommendations to improve the situation for existing and prospective home owners:

  • more efficient assessment of the borrowers' creditworthiness: only those who can pay back the loan should get one. This will reduce banks' potential losses while imprudent borrowers are spared bankruptcy;
  • more protection for borrowers: prospective home owners should be entitled to a 14-day cool-off period, so that they can change their minds about taking out a mortgage;
  • more flexibility for borrowers: the cost of early repayments  and risks of foreign-currency loan should be borne by banks, although "fair and objectively justified" compensation for lenders must be available;
  • if the bank and the borrower both agree, then there could be a simpler way to settle the non-repayment of a loan. The borrower would just send the keys to the bank and that would be the end of it.

Press release



© European Parliament


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