- Global credit intelligence provider, Pepper Advantage, has published data on its 100,000+ UK residential mortgage portfolio, which shows a 23.3% annual jump in the arrears rate in Q3 2023 to reach a post-financial crisis high
- This forecast is corroborated by the rate of Direct Debit Rejections, a form of missed mortgage payment and a leading indicator of borrower stress, which grew 19.3% over the same period
- Pepper Advantage’s portfolio has a higher composition of borrowers who qualify for needs-based support and are therefore more likely to be impacted by rising costs than the broader UK mortgage market
LONDON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Pepper Advantage, a global credit intelligence company, has published data on its portfolio of over 100,000 UK residential mortgages that shows a 23.3% annual increase in the arrears rate in the third quarter of 2023 to reach a new post-Financial Crisis high.
This growth in the arrears rate follows successive increases in the percentage of mortgages that experienced a Direct Debit Rejection (DDR), where a direct debit instruction is processed by a creditor but there are insufficient funds in the borrower’s account. The Q3 DDR rate grew 19.3% year-on-year, a smaller increase than the 33.3% annual figure recorded in April 2023, documented in Pepper Advantage’s previous report.
Pepper Advantage expects macroeconomic pressure on borrowers to continue to impact arrears in the fourth quarter and into next year. This assessment was echoed in the Bank of England’s latest Credit Conditions Survey, which forecast defaults to increase in Q4. This is partly due to the central bank’s estimation that only 20-25% of the impact of interest rate rises has filtered through into the economy.