The British housing market, long a bastion of stability, has a hidden fault line. While the headlines focus on interest rate hikes and falling prices, a far more insidious force is at work: the unregulated rise of non-bank lenders. These entities, free from the capital requirements and oversight that constrain traditional banks, have quietly captured a third of all new mortgages. In doing so, they are not just offering loans; they are creating a parallel financial system that threatens to destabilise the entire market.
The scale of the shift is staggering. Since 2018, non-bank lenders, including 'challenger banks' and investment-backed fintech firms, have increased their market share from 20% to 32%, according to UK Finance data. They now hold over £200 billion in mortgage debt. Unlike high street banks, these lenders do not take deposits. They fund their loans by packaging them into bonds sold to pension funds, insurers, and hedge funds. This is not banking. It is financial alchemy, dependent on the continued appetite of global investors.
The concern no one is raising is the structural fragility this creates. When a bank fails, depositors are protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. When a non-bank lender fails, there is no safety net. The Bank of England has warned of 'liquidity risks' but has failed to act. Last year, the collapse of several smaller non-bank lenders, including the specialist buy-to-let lender LendInvest, revealed the cracks. Borrowers were suddenly forced into repayment plans with interest rates exceeding 10%. The Bank belatedly admitted that the sector's rapid growth had outpaced regulatory preparedness.
The real danger lies in the secondary consequences. Non-bank lenders have aggressively targeted high-risk borrowers: self-employed workers, those with complex incomes, and buyers of flats in high-rise buildings with cladding issues. These are the very groups that traditional banks shun. The logic is perverse. In a rising market, these loans appear profitable. But in a downturn, defaults cascade. The bonds backed by these mortgages are traded globally, meaning a UK housing downturn could ricochet through international markets, amplifying systemic risk.
Consider the case of 'mortgage prisoners' trapped with non-bank lenders. Once a loan is securitised, the originating lender has little incentive to offer flexibility. Homeowners who miss payments face swift repossession. The Council of Mortgage Lenders has reported a 40% increase in repossessions by non-bank lenders since 2021. This is not a market failure; it is a policy failure. The Treasury has refused to extend its 'mortgage charter' to non-bank lenders, leaving thousands without protection.
There is a broader macroeconomic illusion at play. The Bank of England's stress tests focus on the banking sector, assuming that non-bank lenders will simply disappear in a crisis. They will not. They will transmit distress. When investors flee, these lenders stop lending, freezing the market. This has already happened in the US, where non-bank mortgage lenders accounted for 80% of lending before the 2008 crisis. When the music stopped, they evaporated, leaving a trail of defaults.
The solution is not more regulation of high street banks. It is a redefinition of what constitutes a 'lender'. The Financial Conduct Authority has the power to impose capital and liquidity rules on non-banks. It has chosen not to. The Bank of England has warned of 'blind spots'. It has done little more than issue consultative papers. The British housing market is being rebuilt on sand, and the architects of this edifice are silent.
Dr. Aris Thorne: 'We are replicating the errors of the subprime crisis, but in slow motion. The only difference is that this time, the debt is hidden in pension funds, not on bank balance sheets.'








