Lender stability a priority for brokers placing new business
Six out of ten brokers are increasingly considering whether they and their customers can rely on lenders when placing new business, a United Trust Bank survey has found.
"In uncertain times it’s natural that brokers and intermediaries want complete confidence that the lenders they recommend to their clients are going to deliver"
The poll asked brokers operating in the property finance and asset finance sectors if the stability and reliability of lenders was a factor when placing new business and nearly two thirds (60%) of the 146 respondents indicated that it was. 36% said ‘no’ and the remaining 4% didn’t know.
Harley Kagan, Group Managing Director – United Trust Bank, commented: “In uncertain times it’s natural that brokers and intermediaries want complete confidence that the lenders they recommend to their clients are going to deliver the funds and the service they’ve promised.
“Many brokers know from past experience that in challenging markets some lenders may try to change their credit decisions whilst others have difficulty delivering a prompt service or releasing funds on schedule. It only takes one or two examples of a lender changing a deal for that to knock a broker’s confidence in the lender and the customer’s confidence in the broker.
“UTB have always been a reliable, stable and responsible lender, in a market for the long term and providing support to our broker partners and our borrowers when they need it most.”
Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
Inflation
Inflation sees bigger-than-expected drop to 2.8% - but is it an outlier?
Bank Of England
Decision to hold interest rates an 'active choice', BoE's Bailey says
House Prices
House prices to fall 2% in 2026 as war in Iran 'fundamentally changes outlook'
Interest Rates
Case for hiking rates is growing, MPC member says
This week's biggest stories:
Inflation
Inflation sees bigger-than-expected drop to 2.8% - but is it an outlier?
Bank Of England
Decision to hold interest rates an 'active choice', BoE's Bailey says
House Prices
House prices to fall 2% in 2026 as war in Iran 'fundamentally changes outlook'
Interest Rates
Case for hiking rates is growing, MPC member says
CPD article
Beyond the Bank of Family: How lenders can unlock homeownership
In The Spotlight
'Bridging is no longer confined to a single point in a transaction': Henry Manley-Cooper, HTB