I have a house in negative equity and was hoping to get advice on the issue of banks and mortgage contracts and if anyone knows if there is an requirement on the banks to advise customers of negative equity and what it would mean for the mortgage taken out, as the banks placed their own valuation on the property and gave 100% mortgages, surley the responsibility falls on both banks and customers, is there a notice stating that if the property falls into negative equity that the borrower must make up the shortfall and was it not taken into account when underwriting the loan. Was there negligence on the bank to leave out an important piece of advice to customers. It may have some stop and think!
Give’s a loan of €10’000 will ye? I’ll repay the 50% I owe you over the next 3 years.An agreement or a contract with two parties you and the bank and therefore the liability should be shared 50/50.
If.If the bank gave you wrong advise or information then of course they should be liable.
If... but if the OP signed the bit saying that they understood what they were getting themselves into then they are liable.If the bank or your solicitor did not explain and you didnt go into the contract with full information then it is null and void anyway as the basics of contract law were not in place.
An agreement or a contract with two parties you and the bank and therefore the liability should be shared 50/50.
If the bank gave you wrong advise or information then of course they should be liable.
If the bank or your solicitor did not explain and you didnt go into the contract with full information then it is null and void anyway as the basics of contract law were not in place.
Ryandd, by now we have got the message. You are in negative equity and you want the bank to share your pain. Well they are not going to. Why don't you focus on doing everything you can to sort out your negative equity and if you really feel that you can't why don't you skip to the UK and go forum shopping.
If your property had increased in value, would you have shared the profits with the bank? Did you at all make a wrong decision in overpaying for a property?
If you continue to focus your anger on blaming the banks you will never move on. Why don't you do the money makeover thread and hopefully get concrete advice on what you need to do. Being angry with the banks is not going to do you any good. Love them or loath them, we need banks. Banks are about making money, not empathy.
Rylandd the courts have refused to accept the concept of reckless lending, that the banks should be liable for some of the shortfall in a negative equity situation
Ryandd, by now we have got the message. You are in negative equity and you want the bank to share your pain. Well they are not going to. Why don't you focus on doing everything you can to sort out your negative equity and if you really feel that you can't why don't you skip to the UK and go forum shopping.
If your property had increased in value, would you have shared the profits with the bank? Did you at all make a wrong decision in overpaying for a property?
If you continue to focus your anger on blaming the banks you will never move on. Why don't you do the money makeover thread and hopefully get concrete advice on what you need to do. Being angry with the banks is not going to do you any good. Love them or loath them, we need banks. Banks are about making money, not empathy.
I don't understand this point. Did the bank take your savings and keep them?And just for the record the banks did take the profit I made from a house sale 10years ago, they were quiet keen to take it for 2 years savings scheme Bank customers were loyal joining family members and friends over the years.
. And just for the record the banks did take the profit I made from a house sale 10years ago, they were quiet keen to take it for 2 years savings scheme
. I await the plan of action
I was just saying in relation to the banks customers if people didn't keep their money in Irish banks they would collapse and I was making the point that banks have made money over the years through customer loyalty and should remember this when customers are in trouble with mortgages. Im not talking about debt forgiveness but some banks need to take a more understanding approach when dealing with mortgage arrears.
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