New mortgage lending still depressed in Spain and Tenerife

Mortgage lending still depressed in Tenerife, the Canary Islands and Spain.

Mortgage lending still depressed in Tenerife, the Canary Islands and Spain.

New mortgage lending in Spain is still very depressed, according to the latest numbers from the National Institute of Statistics (INE).

According to the latest figures, for December and therefore the whole of 2009, new mortgage lending fell again last year, by 22% in volume terms (to 653,173), and by 34% in value terms (to 76.8 billion Euros). These are the lowest levels in both volume and value terms since the INE started publishing this data series in 2003.

The number of new mortgages signed has been falling now for 3 years, and the value of new mortgages has been falling even faster. That means there is less money around to spend on Spanish property, which puts downward pressure on prices.

Mortgage lending has been changing in percentage terms over the last few years - falling in both volume and value for the last 3 years, though the rate of decline improved slightly in 2009. That means it is still falling heavily, just not by as much as last year.

Over the last 2 years, new mortgage lending has been falling more in value terms than in volume terms. That means that the average mortgage value is also falling, as borrowers take out smaller mortgages. The average value of new mortgages last year was 117,688 Euros, down 16% on 2008.

Banks have tightened up their lending criteria, and now demand bigger deposits. But also because Spanish property prices are falling, so borrowers don’t need such big mortgages as before. New mortgage lending is down 51% by volume, and 59% by value, compared to 2006, when the market peaked. That is a massive decline in the amount of money around chasing property

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