itsallwrong
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4 times combined salary?
4 times combined salary is normal
It shouln't be. Lending too loose in recent times, that is what got people into the messes they are in now.
Its what got some people in the mess they are in, not everyone. There is no rate of lending that will protect someone if they get unemployed no matter how carefull the banks and borrowers are with debt to income ratios. Thats the risk both sides took and the main problem at the moment are the sheer numbers that are in trouble, most of which will improve as the economy recovers (out of work, drop in hours/income etc)
The reason banks are trying to help customers in trouble is that it isnt worth their while repossesing houses in NE and adding houses to the market would only make the problem worse. If the market was better and there wasnt so much NE it would be a different story
Yes, that is the risk both sides took, not the risk taxpayers like myself took. So, forgive me if I resent the fact that my hard earned tax euros have been fed into banks so other people can live in gaffs they cannot afford.
The market is not sick, so there is little point wishing it will get "better" - the market is returning to normal pricing.
Nama own one of the biggest property portfolios in the world, plenty of spots within their stock.Lovelyhorse, its not that simple. Our tax has already been fed into the banks. The distressed mortgages are not benefiting from the tax that was pumped into these bankrupt banks.
In the few cases of repossession we have seen, most people are still reliable for the debt long after the house has been foreclosed. The banks are still keeping your tax bailout, they are not returning it to you, me or anyone else. They are being paid for the distressed property twice over.
There is a five year waiting list for a council house. Where do you propose to house the repossessed?
If we issue them with rent allowance, we are looking at bailout number two.
Our tax has already been fed into the banks. The distressed mortgages are not benefiting from the tax that was pumped into these bankrupt banks.
I presume you mean liable for the debt. And what you are describing is what happens when one signs a binding contract. The terms of the contract... apply. It is actually that simple.In the few cases of repossession we have seen, most people are still reliable for the debt long after the house has been foreclosed.
No, I think you'll find they are being paid once. In accordance with the contract which was signed with the house and the mortgage central to it. What you and everyone who is remonstrating about the terrible banks are on about is how you would like contracts (upon which the law and all modern business is based) not to count if you don't like them once you've used them for a while.The banks are still keeping your tax bailout, they are not returning it to you, me or anyone else. They are being paid for the distressed property twice over.
That is a completely separate issue. What you are asking is that the housing market be completely paralysed, with hundreds of thousands of people frozen out of it, for the benefit of people who signed contracts and now want to ignore those contracts, and continue to live in houses which they cannot afford and are not paying for.There is a five year waiting list for a council house. Where do you propose to house the repossessed?
If we issue them with rent allowance, we are looking at bailout number two.
Nama own one of the biggest property portfolios in the world, plenty of spots within their stock.
I'm sorry, as a renter, who spent many years being sneered at for renting when I was crazy for not getting my foot on the ladder, I'm ****ed if I will ever agree with anyone who tries to suggest that contracts should cease to exist for a special chosen few who happened to buy at a foolish time for a foolish price.
Oh and I forgot to mention the fact that they are free to rent a home that they can afford on the open market, same as anyone else. "Owning" a house is not a human right. Just because they cant pay their jumbo tiger mortgage does not mean they cannot afford to rent somewhere that suits their means.
By any chance are you a civil servant or a banker?
No, you know what, you're completely right. What will push this country forward into the next upsurge in prosperity is if we completely pay off the mortgages of everyone who bought in the years 2004 to 2007, and if they're very good, those who bought 2007 to 2009 as well.With attitudes like this the country will be paralyzed for decades.
My words were "chosen few," I was referring to the 'special' nature of those who consider themselves above paying their mortgages rather than their numbers. However, now you mention it, relatively few of the population are in a situation where they are going to be in danger of losing the houses which they do not own and have failed to keep up adequate and legally agreed payments upon. (The house becomes 'owned' when the mortgage is paid in full, and no longer has a mortgage on it). Relatively, compared to the total population, that is.There is more than a "few" who purchased at the wrong time and those that did were sold a pipe dream.
I think it is unpleasant, and actually, I think that we would be in agreement were we to discuss it at length. I think that if one party is foolish enough to enter into an agreement with any other party, they have to consider the downside themselves.What do you think about people going bankrupt?
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