Land Registry |
A record of property,
ownership and the mortgage
is registered in a central register at HM land registry. |
Land
Registry Fees |
A fee payable
to the land registry to change an entry in their records following
a transaction involving registered land. This can be following
a change of ownership or just a change of mortgage.
See fee, arrangement fee, fees added to loan, booking
fee, conveyancing
fee, IGP, stamp
duty and valuation
fee. |
Landlord's
Reference |
This is a reference
from the previous landlord regarding the general conduct of
the tenant and whether rent has been paid promptly. |
Late
Charge |
A fee the lender
imposes for receiving payments late. |
Late
Payment |
A payment a
lender receives after the due date has passed. |
Leasehold
|
The land on
which the property
is built is not owned directly by the property
purchaser and is held under a lease for a fixed period. |
Legal
Charge |
The means by
which lenders enforce their rights to a property,
and is recorded at the land registry. There are various different
types of legal charge and the type used will vary from lender
to lender. Building societies tend to use a charge for the
specific amount that they have lent. Banks tend to use an
all monies charge, allowing them to free equity in a property
if it is owned by them. This may allow them to recover overdrafts
and other loans if they have granted more than just a mortgage.
A primary mortgage
will normally be secured by a first charge. Building societies
are allowed to lend only if they have a first charge on a
property.
Second or subsequent charges may be granted on a property
if additional money
has been borrowed against it. |
Legal
Mortgage Fee |
The fee charged
by the solicitors
acting for the lender in creating their legal charge over
the property.
|
Lender
|
An organisation
which offers mortgage
products. |
Lender's
Arrangement Fees |
Fee for arranging
a loan passed on by the buyer to the lender. |
Lenders
Fees |
Designed to
cover costs incurred by the lender to secure the loan. This
is paid by the borrower. |
Lessee |
Person to whom
the lease is granted. |
Lessor |
An individual
or company who grant a lease. |
Liabilities |
Debts and outgoing
payments that you are legally responsible to pay. |
Libor
|
London interbank
offered rate is the rate at which banks notionally buy and
sell money
to each other. It varies from day to day and is closely linked
to base rate. The relationship of libor to base rate can give
an indication of the possible future direction of base rates.
If libor is significantly above base rate it indicates that
the money
market believes interest rates are about to increase. If it
is significantly below, the reverse is true. The key libor
rate is 3 month libor, however rates are also quoted for one,
six and twelve month periods. Libor-linked a mortgage
linked to libor will be charged at a given margin over the
interbank rate (typically 1 to 1.5%) and is likely to be reset
quarterly. They offer the customer the opportunity to pay
a rate closer to the true cost of money.
In a low interest rate environment they are likely to result
in lower overall payments but will be more expensive in periods
of higher interest rates. |
Life
Company |
A life assurance
company. |
Life
Insurance |
A policy payable
upon the death of the insured, usually referred to as assurance.
|
Loan
|
The amount to
be borrowed. See also: consumer
credit act. |
Loan
Application |
Form you fill
out to apply
for a loan. |
Loan
Application Fee |
Lenders fee
for a loan application. |
Loan
Authority Search Fee |
This is the
fee payable for the local authority search. |
Loan
Consolidation |
A large loan
is taken to help pay for smaller loans held elsewhere. |
Loan
Illustration |
Is the example
of the monthly cost of a mortgage
and other expenses associated with the loan such as set-up
costs. |
Loan
To Value Ratio |
Is the ratio
of the loan amount to the property
valuation expressed as a percentage. E.g. If a borrower is
seeking a loan of £20,000 on a property
worth £40,000 it has a 50% loan to value rate. If the loan
were £30,000, the LTV would be 75%. The higher the loan to
value the greater the lender's perceived risk. Lenders will
be more cautious in underwriting high loan to value loans.
Loans above normal lending LTV ratios may require additional
security. |
Local
Authority Search |
A search of
local authority records to confirm the status of the property.
Local authority searches should reveal any proposed changes
in the area, the details of the planning
permission for the subject property
and whether any enforcement notices have been served by the
local authority. |
Low
Cost Endowment |
Is the most
common form of endowment
policy used to repay a home loan. It is a mix of full
endowment and term assurance designed to provide full life
cover in the event of death during the loan period. If investment
returns are high enough it should also provide sufficient
funds to repay the loan at the end of the term and ideally
provide the borrower with a tax free cash surplus. It is not
guaranteed to pay off the loan and that any shortfall will
have to be made up by the borrower. |
Low
Start (Premiums) |
A premium structure
for a low cost endowment
or other investment
policy which allows the level of premiums payable to commence
at a low level and build up over a period of time (normally
the first five years). The total premiums
payable under a low-start arrangement will exceed those payable
under a normal contribution structure to compensate for the
loss of investment growth on the reduced payments in the early
years. |
Loyalty
Bonus |
A concessionary
bonus (usually by way of a temporary reduction in interest)
payable for maintaining a satisfactory account with a lender
for a period of years. Alternatively, loyalty bonuses may
be offered to existing customers who return to the lender
for a new mortgage.
In which case the bonus may be dealt with by way of a reduction
in the set-up costs of the new loan or a lump sum payable
upon completion. |
Loan
To Value Ratio (LTV) |
This
is the ratio of the loan amount to the property
valuation expressed as a percentage. E.g. If a borrower is
seeking a loan of £20,000 on a property
worth £40,000 it has a 50% loan to value rate. If the loan
were £30,000, the LTV would be 75%. The higher the loan to
value the greater the lender's perceived risk. Lenders will
be more cautious in underwriting high loan to value loans.
Loans above normal lending LTV ratios may require additional
security. |