Bad Investment property

wino

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73
Hi ,

I have a second property as an investment. It's on a 22 year interest only with Haven which is on the Euribor rate which is alot higher than the standard variable rates. The rent I'm recieving is only 1100 a month, a shortfall of over 220 euro a month of which I am subsidising. The property is now only worth around the same as the loan which is 300K. Do I try to get an annuity mortgage over a longer term to try and start paying off this loan and will the banks entertain me?. I'm very conscious of not being able to afford a property on an interest only loan when the rates are as low now as they wll ever be!
Any suggestions would be kindly appreciated

Wino
 
You could sell up and cut your losses too. If you're not in negative equity might be the best solution in fact. The only way your investment is going to turn around is if rents climb by 220 euro a month and/or your property increases dramatically in value.

You may never get the return you envisaged and cutting your losses would then be sensible.
 
Hey Wino

If you are struggling to afford an interest only mortgage then the banks are very unlikely to offer you an annuity mortgage. Not sure from your post if you are struggling though.

Quick excercise here with lots of vague assumptions but just to get you thinking:
If you hold the property for 5 years it will cost you 12 X 5 X 220= 13,200 in interest. Maintenance/letting charges of roughly 1,100(1 month's rent) per year means a further 5,500.

Rough cost to keep property for 5 years is 18,700. If you sold now, what would your loss be?

You just need to start weighing up your options based on where you think interest rates will go, property prices will go, rent levels will go etc.
 
Hi all,

My thoughts on it are to try and hang on. There is a train station due in about 12 months time which will hopefully help the area. I'm in the private sector with little or now pension and I doubt if a bank would ever give me this chance again.Long term considerations need to be made for my retirement and there is also a mortgage protection policy which can act as a life insurance policy for my family-worst case scenario.
Sorry to be so morbid and thanks again for your replys.

Wino
 
Hi all,

My thoughts on it are to try and hang on. There is a train station due in about 12 months time which will hopefully help the area. I'm in the private sector with little or now pension and I doubt if a bank would ever give me this chance again.Long term considerations need to be made for my retirement and there is also a mortgage protection policy which can act as a life insurance policy for my family-worst case scenario.
Sorry to be so morbid and thanks again for your replys.

Wino
Why would you choose property as your pension, instead of just getting a traditional pension, with all the tax breaks that go with it?
 
Why would you choose property as your pension, instead of just getting a traditional pension, with all the tax breaks that go with it?


Very simply, the Op is controlling his own destiny. In a traditional pension, a large chunk of the fund will go in Management Fees. this fee, that fee and every other god damn fee you could imagine. Now if that is not a good enough reason well what is.
 
Why would you choose property as your pension, instead of just getting a traditional pension, with all the tax breaks that go with it?

As an example my pension fund over 10 years has returned 0%. That's not taking inflation into account at all. So even with tax relief I am not convinced by the argument for private pensions. I still pay into mine so maybe I'm daft but I also have money invested in property and the stock market. The best option if you can do it is to invest in different sectors.
 
Thanks complainer,

but I'd have to agree with mercman.
The pension I have had since the early nineties is still in freefall and I'd hate to think what I would have lost in the last few years if I had put in the kind of funds the so called experts advised me on. I have just discovered that an evergreen fund I've been investing in is returning a little of 1% a year while the management fees are 3 % per year.
Go figure.
To have a pension worth something half decent on retirement at present would see me having to put in over 1K a month- I just don't have it
 
If somebody on AAM took the time to work out the fees taken from Pensions and Managed funds both directly and indirectly. Why do you think Banks have these Pension and Investment cos. And we all know why type of people work and sell in Banks ??

Personslly I've learned the very hard way. Case in High Court on October 19 and it will give me every great pleasure to report back the full extent of what happened.
 
Why would you choose property as your pension, instead of just getting a traditional pension, with all the tax breaks that go with it?


With a property purchase you can anticipate all the costs, you can have a fair idea of the return and there are no sneaky costs. You fully control it, you can sell it if you need a lump sum. With a pension you have absolutely no idea of the return and it might even be close to zero, the fund can go bust, the charges, mostly hidden, mean you don't know how much you are investing, you have no control over where it is invested, in Ireland this means that a lot of pension funds are overly subscribed to Irish shares which is not a good thing. And finally when you reach retirement date you have to purchase an annuity within a certain amount of time and depending on the timing you could get a very bad return resulting in poverty in retirement.
 
If somebody on AAM took the time to work out the fees taken from Pensions and Managed funds both directly and indirectly. Why do you think Banks have these Pension and Investment cos. And we all know why type of people work and sell in Banks ??

Personslly I've learned the very hard way. Case in High Court on October 19 and it will give me every great pleasure to report back the full extent of what happened.


As an example my pension fund over 10 years has returned 0%. That's not taking inflation into account at all. So even with tax relief I am not convinced by the argument for private pensions. I still pay into mine so maybe I'm daft but I also have money invested in property and the stock market. The best option if you can do it is to invest in different sectors.

Very simply, the Op is controlling his own destiny. In a traditional pension, a large chunk of the fund will go in Management Fees. this fee, that fee and every other god damn fee you could imagine. Now if that is not a good enough reason well what is.

All of the complaints about pension funds here also apply to property. The returns on property investments have been very poor, and in many cases negative.

With a property purchase you can anticipate all the costs, you can have a fair idea of the return and there are no sneaky costs. You fully control it, you can sell it if you need a lump sum. With a pension you have absolutely no idea of the return and it might even be close to zero, the fund can go bust, the charges, mostly hidden, mean you don't know how much you are investing, you have no control over where it is invested, in Ireland this means that a lot of pension funds are overly subscribed to Irish shares which is not a good thing. And finally when you reach retirement date you have to purchase an annuity within a certain amount of time and depending on the timing you could get a very bad return resulting in poverty in retirement.
Pretty much everything in this post is factually incorrect, apart from the annuity issue. Property investors cannot anticipate all costs - they have little control over management fees, over tax. They cannot anticipate how rental return is going to grow or fall. There are many sneaky costs, like renovating after nightmare tenants.

Thanks complainer,

but I'd have to agree with mercman.
The pension I have had since the early nineties is still in freefall and I'd hate to think what I would have lost in the last few years if I had put in the kind of funds the so called experts advised me on. I have just discovered that an evergreen fund I've been investing in is returning a little of 1% a year while the management fees are 3 % per year.
Go figure.
To have a pension worth something half decent on retirement at present would see me having to put in over 1K a month- I just don't have it

Have you actually compared your two investments? The 1% return on your pension (even with the fees) still beats the losses on your property investment.

No Irish pension fund has gone bust. All charges are quoted up front. Every pensions provider offers a choice of funds, so if you dont want Irish shares, you don't take them.

I'm no cheerleader for pensions, but there is no sensible, financial comparison going on here. If you want to do a comparison, run the numbers. Remember, no pension investor ended up in negative equity on their pension.
 
Complainer, whilst I accept your viewpoint, I will in October be able to give you a true fact analysis on funds investments, the behind the scenes of the downright crooked ways the funds are managed. The commissions paid to the agents and brokers and the downright ignorance shown to customers and how they play them like fish. And most people simply do not have the time and resources to check their Investments. They believe that if their money is managed by a Bank it is safe. How wrong these people are. Why do you think the largest Bank in this business in this country made over €600 million in profit. And that was not from good Banking. And I have the proof to show every point made in case somebody wishes to start proceedings to shut me up.
 
Complainer, whilst I accept your viewpoint, I will in October be able to give you a true fact analysis on funds investments, the behind the scenes of the downright crooked ways the funds are managed. The commissions paid to the agents and brokers and the downright ignorance shown to customers and how they play them like fish. And most people simply do not have the time and resources to check their Investments. They believe that if their money is managed by a Bank it is safe. How wrong these people are. Why do you think the largest Bank in this business in this country made over €600 million in profit. And that was not from good Banking. And I have the proof to show every point made in case somebody wishes to start proceedings to shut me up.
And there are regular stories in newspapers about crooked property deals too. Remember the mortgage broker who sold his own UK property to his client? And the Offaly FFer with the secret profits from his 'partners'?

There are always bad apples.
 
There are always bad apples.

Of course there are. But I'm talking about people that work within a large Financial Organisation who portray themselves as if their dirt doesn't smell. There are crooks everywhere, but to entrust an organisation with large portions of one's hard earned money and the Institution concerned break their own rules and the same persons are still employed. Well that is not bad apples - it is ROT - and leave apples out of this. I like apples.
 
Hi ,

I have a second property as an investment. It's on a 22 year interest only with Haven which is on the Euribor rate which is alot higher than the standard variable rates. The rent I'm recieving is only 1100 a month, a shortfall of over 220 euro a month of which I am subsidising. The property is now only worth around the same as the loan which is 300K. Do I try to get an annuity mortgage over a longer term to try and start paying off this loan and will the banks entertain me?. I'm very conscious of not being able to afford a property on an interest only loan when the rates are as low now as they wll ever be!
Any suggestions would be kindly appreciated

Wino
 
No Irish pension fund has gone bust. All charges are quoted up front. Every pensions provider offers a choice of funds, so if you dont want Irish shares, you don't take them.
Didn't the Waterford Glass employees end up with little or no pension?
 
I imagine a pensioner ending up in negative equity is akin to a pensioner sticking all their wealth into the stock market just before a crash-it's just something you don't do. The pensioner should have invested early in stocks and/or property to minimise the risks of crashes over time and move to 'safer' investments the older he/she got.

I also like having a bit of investment property as I have a good idea what it pays relative to a salary. It is a bit of a comfort thing, having bricks and mortar-no doubt about that.
 
Didn't the Waterford Glass employees end up with little or no pension?

That was an underfunded DB scheme, which is a totally different scenario to what I mentioned here.

Well isn't a return of 1% worse than negative equity?
SO you'd prefer a -10% return to a 1% return? :confused: Can I interest you in some investment products that I'm selling?
 
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