Brendan Burgess
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I had sent a briefing to the members of the Oireachtas Finance Committee to get the focus onto the SVR issue. I didn't watch the meeting live, but here is some of the press coverage
Here is the transcript
BoI rejects mortgage rate"profiteering" claims - Ciarán Hancock, Irish Times
(This is the most comprehensive report on the interaction)
Central Bank proposals will reduce number of mortgage customers: Boucher RTE.ie news
Boucher may have a point, but he needs to cut interest rates - Comment piece by Charlie Weston , Irish Independent
Here is the transcript
BoI rejects mortgage rate"profiteering" claims - Ciarán Hancock, Irish Times
(This is the most comprehensive report on the interaction)
[broken link removed] - Cantillon column, Irish TimesDublin-based TD [broken link removed] accused him of “serious profiteering” by charging up to 4.5 per cent for its standard variable rate (SVR) when its cost of funding was 1.15 per cent for the six months to the end of June 2014, and at a time when [broken link removed] is set to cut its rate by 0.25 percentage points from December 1st. ..
Earlier, Fianna Fáil’s Michael McGrath and Fine Gael’s Kieran O’Donnell asked Mr Boucher how then was Bank of Ireland able to charge a fixed rate in Northern Ireland of only about 2 per cent.
Mr Boucher said this was a special offer reflecting market conditions there and noted Bank of Ireland pays the 1 per cent stamp duty for first-time buyers in the Republic.
Bank of Ireland chief executive [broken link removed] told a parliamentary committee yesterday that the group won’t “slavishly follow the strategies of other banks” in cutting rates, because the margin it makes on these mortgages is not “exorbitant”.
Tell that to homeowners on Bank of Ireland variabl- rate mortages, who are paying considerably over the odds for their home loans even though in Europe mortgage-holders are benefiting considerably from historically low European interest rates.
In France, for example, variable-rate mortgages can be taken out at about 2.5 per cent.
Central Bank proposals will reduce number of mortgage customers: Boucher RTE.ie news
Meanwhile Mr Boucher received criticism for the rates it levies on its existing mortgage customers.
Fianna Fáil’s Michael McGrath said the cost of funding had reduced substantially in recent times but the bank’s standard variable rates had not fallen in six years.
Mr McGrath asked how the bank could justify the rate, particularly when compared to what was available to customers in Northern Ireland.
Mr Boucher said the margin the bank made on these loans was not exorbitant, and it was providing mortgages with significant liquidity risks.
Boucher may have a point, but he needs to cut interest rates - Comment piece by Charlie Weston , Irish Independent
"No plans" for BoI to follow AIB in cutting rate John Walsh, Irish ExaminerHowever, he could play his part by lowering his bank's very high variable mortgage rates.
His borrowers are paying interest that are almost twice those in the rest of the eurozone.
AIB has shown the way for Mr Boucher on interest rates.
There are currently no plans to reduce Bank of Ireland’s standard variable mortgage rate following AIB’s 0.25% cut, although the situation is under review, according to chief executive Richie Boucher.
Speaking to the Oireachtas Finance Committee yesterday, Mr Boucher noted that AIB owes the taxpayer €20bn. “It is their decision how they use that money,” he said.
AIB announced last Thursday that it was cutting its standard variable rate mortgage by 0.25% to 4.15%. Bank of Ireland has not reduced its standard variable rate mortgage since 2009.
However, Mr Boucher denied a claim by Fianna Fáil TD Michael McGrath that the bank was “profiteering” from ordinary customers.
Mr McGrath said Bank of Ireland was charging 4.5% for the standard variable rate mortgage yet its cost of funding had dropped to roughly 1.15%. Moreover, Bank of Ireland was offering much more competitive rates in Northern Ireland and Britain, Mr McGrath added.
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