Brendan Burgess
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Sounds more like bad business management than a problem with compound interest rates to me.The facility letter clearly stated the amount of credit advanced was €1.127 million but, on foot of that, the “total amount repayable” was €2.252 million. The cost of the credit was €1.125 million, the difference between the two amounts.
...
During most of the years since the facility issued, the couple were unable to meet the repayments, even when they were interest only, the judge said. Monthly interest-only repayments were some €5,562 in 2015 and rose to some €10,000 from 2020.
It's both bad investment and the failure to understand compound interest.
I have seen this time and time again. "I borrowed €300k 20 years ago. I have repaid €200k but I still owe €200k!"
Brendan
But prices have increased by around 50% since 2016. They must have been on a very high interest rate for compounding to wipe out that capital gain.The couple, he said, could have sold the properties in 2016 when it was estimated the sale would have discharged the entire loan but Ms McKenny indicated they wished to hold on to them at that time.
- property crash didn't affect anything, either the borrowings made sense or they didn't.
The couple, he said, could have sold the properties in 2016 when it was estimated the sale would have discharged the entire loan but Ms McKenny indicated they wished to hold on to them at that time.
People have no idea. Ask anyone to tell you to the nearest 50k or 100k how much interest they'll pay overall on their mortgage and almost no one will be able to tell you. People don't know how much they pay for their houses.There seems to be a real hesitation by some to accept that there is a cost involved with finance. That what one pays back is significantly more than what they have borrowed.
As usual in the reporting we only get half of the story. I don't believe a word of it that they didn't understand interest. It's shocking they didn't sell in 2016 when they could have.But prices have increased by around 50% since 2016. They must have been on a very high interest rate for compounding to wipe out that capital gain.
Do people borrowing not get an amortisation table, don't brokers do it up for their clients. At any given moment on my home loan I can log into my banking online and see how much more I've to pay in capital and interest monthly.People have no idea. Ask anyone to tell you to the nearest 50k or 100k how much interest they'll pay overall on their mortgage and almost no one will be able to tell you. People don't know how much they pay for their houses.
Additionally not only will you pay back more than you borrowed, but it's feasible with rates no longer being low that the interest payments alone will total more than the amount borrowed.
That Irish people, who are often financially illiterate, choose huge investments with a lot of leverage as the default investment option seems nuts to me.
I'd bet anything that even if there was no crash that none of this made any sense from the beginning. Probably borrowed way too much because the banks were giving it out like confetti and with very little money put up front by the borrowers.This is the key point. If the property crash had not happened, they could have sold their properties and repaid their loans.
But it is clear that they did not want to clear the loans when they could have done.
I have no sympathy for them.
Brendan
On top of that the pmt function in excel is great for playing around with to see if what difference different rates or extra repayments make. It's a little bit advanced but if you know excel it's easy.Do people borrowing not get an amortisation table, don't brokers do it up for their clients. At any given moment on my home loan I can log into my banking online and see how much more I've to pay in capital and interest monthly.
I've seen plenty of people who can't do maths complain that banks load the interest onto the start of the mortgage as if it's some kind of conspiracy
I'll agree with that. With the proviso there was outrageous bad banking going on as well. I was offered way more than I was looking for myself. My sibling was told they should be borrowing half a mil. Another took them up on it and landed in financial armageddon.5.41% at 2007 property prices was never going to make investment sense even if prices did not collapse.
Their error was looking for the finance in the first place.
I love excel, what's the pmt function?The amount of times you'd
On top of that the pmt function in excel is great for playing around with to see if what difference different rates or extra repayments make. It's a little bit advanced but if you know excel it's easy.
I've seen plenty of people who can't do maths complain that banks load the interest onto the start of the mortgage as if it's some kind of conspiracy
The amount of interest paid over the lifetime or a mortgage is not terribly useful as no one knows for sure what inflation and future interest rates will be.Additionally not only will you pay back more than you borrowed, but it's feasible with rates no longer being low that the interest payments alone will total more than the amount borrowed.
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