Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,805
The ISI has missed its target by 99%. Ask any junior sales rep what happens when you miss your target by 99%...............
Yes it is a target and that's the point that's being missed. There is a target to alleviate as many distressed borrowers as possible and in the ISI's case that target is 15,000 per year.
Brendan, The split mortgage is an interesting one and we need to wait and see how that works out in practice. We need to see what numbers of cases are offered as splits.Again I'm thinking the numbers will be extremely small but I'm open minded for now.
Despite what is being said I dont believe there is much correlation between lenders offering splits and the arrival of formal arrangements.
I think its a missed opportunity to believe that a DSA or a PIA is merely a stick to beat the banks with. A properly functioning PIA in a simplified framework that can be rolled out at a reasonable cost to the debtor and the creditor is what is needed. It should be something that the banks welcome and utilise rather than something to be feared or something to react against. The PIA legislation in current format is a complex cumbersome framework that is difficult and expensive to work with.
When the legislation was being drafted there were too many empty chairs around the table and that needs to be corrected now.
Meanwhile Lorcan O' Connor can get away with presenting that absymal failure of a report yesterday and nobody can question him and nobody can question how such a sorry mess, including the legislation, came to pass.
The mere existence of PIAs and Bankruptcy has encouraged the lenders to offer generous split mortgages, and in the case of AIB, debt write down. In most cases, this is preferable to a PIA or bankruptcy.
I believe the PIA's are based closely on the uk system and that seems to work just fine
Not at all. There is no precedent anywhere in the world for our PIAs which deal with secured and unsecured debt.
In the vast majority of countries, when a borrower can't pay their mortgage, the house is repossessed and sold by the bank.
Our Debt Settlement Arrangement is similar to the IVA in the UK.
Brendan
I see the insolvency service are at it again, predicting a thousand bankruptcies a year, no idea where they are getting the figure from though:
http://www.independent.ie/business/...ptcy-to-soar-into-the-thousands-30182763.html
Most interesting is that all this is going to cost someone. The official assignee instead of selling property is going to hold on to it and manage it. And pay someone to manage it. So now we'll have another new property company in addition to Nama.
I guess the likes of the rent receivers who get paid about 1200 a month, and the auctioneers/estate agents will be paid ? a month, and the locksmiths, and the connection the gas and esb people will all be delighted with this little money spinner.
We have a shortage of property in Dublin, the Minister for Finance wants property to go higher, Nama is holding onto apparently vast swaths of property and now the Insolvency Service/Official Asssignee is going to also hold onto property, is everybody waiting for the top of the bubble to sell?
In the UK when there is a bankruptcy, does the agency hold onto property and deal with it or do they immediately sell it?
Why sell at the bottom of the market when you have a rent coming in?
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