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Mortgage lending recovers from 21-year low

Mortgage lending - Still active - Central Bank
Mortgage lending - Still active - Central Bank

Figures from the Central Bank show that the annual rate of growth in mortgage lending in September recovered from its 21-year low in August.

Today's figures show that net monthly residential mortgages rose last month to €736m, up from the figure of €508m in August. The Central Bank says this confirms the fact that, despite tighter lending standards, lending for the buying of homes remains active.

However, this is a huge decrease from the housing boom's peak in 2006, when the average monthly increase in residential mortgages was almost €2 billion.

The Central Bank adds that the annual rate of increase in residential mortgages continued to fall and the 8.5% increase in September was the lowest since September 1986.

Today's figures also reveal that outstanding debts on credit cards reached €3.1 billion in September, but the annual rate of increase declined to 9.3% from the 10.1% level reached in August.

New spending on credit cards continued to exceed payments of credit card debt last month.