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 A growing number of lenders are offering Islamic Home Finance The
choice for Muslims looking for a home is burgeoning, and the options
open to anyone looking for a green or ethical mortgage.
Britain’s
two million Muslims can now browse from a selection of home financing
options on the high street that comply with Islamic or Sharia law.
Banks are never slow to spot a lucrative market and lenders are keen to
tailor specialist products to this prospective customer base.
“Britain is home to a large and fast-growing
Muslim community, but many have found that their financial needs are
not being serviced,” says Paul Sherrin, head of Islamic Financial
Services at Lloyds TSB.
Home finance products that comply with Sharia law are now available in every Lloyds TSB branch.
“We’re bringing Islamic banking into the
mainstream and giving the Muslim community access to financial services
that meet their needs without compromising their religion.”
Uptake has been excellent, he adds – the bank
now offers a standard home finance product, one aimed mainly at
first-time buyers, and a buy-to-let sharia-compliant product too.
Under Islamic law paying or receiving interest
is forbidden, another reason why these are not mortgages, but called
‘home finance’ instead and are designed with the help of renowned
Islamic scholars.
High-street lenders including Bristol & West and Lloyds TSB also offer a buy-to-let product.
“Until recently Britain’s Muslims have had no
real choice in how they invest their money in keeping with their
faith,” says Alison Pallett, head of consumer lending at Bristol &
West, “and by offering a buy-to-let product that complies with Islamic
law, we’ll be opening up many more possibilities for them.”
And having more high-street lenders offering
Islamic home finance products is bound to be good news for borrowers,”
says Ray Boulger, senior technical manager at brokers Charcol, “since
it can help bring about increasingly competitive deals.”
What is Islamic home finance?
There are two types of sharia-compliant home financing.
In the case of muharaba the bank purchases the
property and sells it on to the client at a higher fixed price with
monthly payments spread over years.
Ijara mortgages are typically lease-based
products, where bank owns the property through the payment term while
the customer pays rent on a monthly basis to the bank.
The Arab Banking Corporation has launched its
Alburaq product, which is being rolled out to high-street lenders to
offer sharia-compliant home finance. Their Diminishing Musharaka
product means that both bank and client contribute towards the cost of
the home – say, 90 to 10 per cent each. Over 25 years, you make monthly
payments to buy the bank’s share and the bank charges you rent, which
is calculated according to the respective shares owned.
At HSBC, the first bank to bring Islamic
financial services to the high street, the Amanah home finance product
means that HSBC buys the property jointly with the customer, charging
rent. Payments are monthly, at a current rate of 5.59 per cent, and
capped, so can’t go over 2.5 per cent above the base rate.
Yet Muslim home finance products have
typically been perceived as expensive, says Keith Leach, senior manager
for Alburaq at ABC. “The products were a little more expensive in the
mid-90s because of the nature of the product, but they have come down a
lot of late,” says Leach.
Until 2003 Muslim home purchase incurred two
sets of stamp duty, at the beginning and end of the finance period –
the second transfer is now exempt. “The only real difference now is
that you need two sets of solicitors, one for the bank and one for the
client,” says Leach. “We have lobbied the government and the Law
Society about this because we think it’s unfair, but they say that the
nature of the actual contracts is sufficiently different for
independent legal advice.”
There is a huge market out there, with Muslims
making up around 3 per cent of the UK population. But there was initial
wariness, says Leach. “In the last year or so things have taken off
because people are more comfortable with the concept,” he adds. ABC now
offers a discounted rate till September 2007, equivalent to 5.18 per
cent on a conventional mortgage, and with solicitors’ fees and
arrangement fees refunded too.
Green mortgages
However, would-be homeowners who want to
follow their conscience with regard to the environment also have more
choice these days.
The Ecology Building Society is one of
Britain’s smallest but fastest-growing building societies, and offers
ethical financial products. Borrowers building their own homes
enlisting traditional or sustainable materials, or making a home
extremely energy-efficient, often choose Ecology, which also lends for
small woodlands and houseboat moorings. Owner-occupier rates start at
6.05 per cent, but are higher for non-residential purchases.
“Our mortgage rates are competitive, but it is
fair to say that they will never top the “best buy” tables,” says Jenny
Barton, marketing manager for Ecology, which won third prize in What
Mortgage’s awards for the best value building society over ten years.
“Rather than enticing new borrowers with upfront discounts and low
initial rates, we aim to provide new and existing customers with
long-term value for money. We do this by giving our borrowers a 0.25
per cent loyalty discount after the first two years of the mortgage,
which applies for the remaining term.
“So, although our rates appear to be slightly
higher, in the long run our mortgages are better value. Unfortunately
most people are concerned with the initial interest rate and compare
mortgages on this basis, rather than the overall cost. But Ecology
isn’t your run-of-the-mill lender and doesn’t provide mortgages for
standard properties. Instead it specialises in mortgages for properties
and projects that benefit the environment – the renovation of a
run-down property, conversion of a disused building or construction of
a new Eco-home,” says Barton.
So what else is on offer when you choose to
stand by your principles? Norwich and Peterborough green mortgages
include discounted rates for newly built properties, at 5.24 per cent
for four years and then rising to 6.49 per cent, N&P’s standard
variable rate. N&P plants 40 trees for each green mortgage.
And if more lenders introduce green mortgages
as energy-efficiency reports become part of HIPs, that could mean a
better deal for borrowers,” says Boulger, who points to Co-operative
Bank mortgages with attractive features and good rates too. The Co-op’s
mortgages have ethical features including payments to ClimateCare, with
rates starting at 4.74 per cent for a first-time buyer discounted
product. “If your starting point is that you want the best green
mortgage, the Co-op has some attractive products,” says Boulger, “and
if you simply want the best deal, the Co-op will be in the frame some
of the time too.”
But check out interest rates carefully, warns
John Mawdsley, managing director of The Mortgage Partnership. “You
could get a much better deal if you look at the whole marketplace, and
use the difference to plant some trees yourself,” he cautions. There is
still some way to go, it seems – but borrowers who want a decent deal
and with a clear conscience now have more choice than ever.
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