LONDON, Nov 30 (Reuters) - British lenders approved the most
mortgages in more than 13 years in October, Bank of England data
showed on Monday, suggesting no let-up yet in a post-coronavirus
lockdown bounce-back in the country's housing market.
But the figures also underscored a broader wariness about
day-to-day borrowing among many consumers - whose spending helps
drive the economy - as the country was hit by a second wave of
COVID-19 cases.
Mortgage approvals for house purchase hit 97,532, up from
92,091 in September and higher than all forecasts in a Reuters
poll of economists.
Britain's housing market has gone into top gear in recent
months, propelled by demand for bigger properties from people
who were locked down at home in the spring and an emergency tax
cut for buyers that is due to expire in March.
The housing recovery looks increasingly at odds with a
renewed slowdown in the economy and a rise in unemployment that
looks set to peak only next year.
The BoE data showed net consumer lending fell by 590 million
pounds ($786 million) on the month, much of it due to repayment
of credit card debt.
Lending to consumers was down 5.6% compared with a year ago,
the biggest such drop since monthly records began in 1994.
Household savings rose by 12.3 billion pounds, the biggest
monthly increase since May.
"A reduction in the use of consumer credit and another
increase in savings suggests many are bracing themselves for
further economic uncertainty," Alistair McQueen, head of savings
and retirement at insurer Aviva, said.
As well as a second wave of coronavirus restrictions,
Britain's economy is also facing the risk of a trade shock if
London and Brussels fail to strike a post-Brexit trade deal by
the end of the year.
($1 = 0.7504 pounds)
(Editing by David Milliken)