Brendan Burgess
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However, that doesn't mean that borrowers ever had a contractual right to roll over to trackers or that KBC ever committed to keep this policy in place for any specific period.
Hi Sarenco
My friend complains that KBC told him that he would roll over onto a tracker when he fixed.
His problem is that the Ombudsman discounted that evidence.
His other problem is that the Fixed Rate Agreement did not say that.
But if the only problem was that the conflict of evidence on what KBC told him, then I think that the public policy espoused in that leaflet would help his case.
Brendan
This attracted my interest on Friday when I read the Indo.
We took out a mortgage in Jan 07 with IIB and decided to fix for 3 years @ 5.45 . When that term was up in 2010, trackers were off the table and 'hard cheese' was what we thought..
I spent this morning reading our documents from 07, and it mentions reverting to prevailing interest rate at end of the fixed term. Is that relevant? And does the fact that we never had a tracker mean I've no business looking for one now?..even with of this flyer coming to light from November 06.
I didn't have a tracker to start with either......but I do now! I'm PTSB.
I understand this is only a document from a broker but it again backs up the story of what their policy was!
Well yes of course policies can change but can a bank or any company advertise a "product" and then the legal documentation representing that not have the options as advertised?
They did advertise "3 year capped trackers" (i have the advert and press release) and under the code of conduct "all avaliable rates must be offered" The capped tracker was not given as an option.Of course not but I have yet to see any advertisement from 2006-08 where KBC guaranteed, or even committed, to offer a borrower a tracker rate on expiry of their fixed-rate term.
If you do have copies of any such advertisements I would be very interested in seeing them.
KBC advertised many things - but not one advert or PR article from 2004 - 2007 advertised or mentioned "Standard Variable Rate" - hence people at the time would not be expected to understand that company's standard variable rate was a very specific rate as no glossary of terms gave any information about what "compnay's standard variable rate". It wasn't just IIB - no bank advert I saw in Irish Times or Independent in 2005 & 2006 mentioned a standard variable rate, so the phrase was simply not in use in relation to the general publicAh, sorry, I thought you were saying that KBC advertised fixed-rate mortgages on the basis that borrowers could opt to roll over to a particular rate on expiry of their fixed-rate term. That is really the subject of this thread.
They did advertise "3 year capped trackers" (i have the advert and press release) and under the code of conduct "all avaliable rates must be offered" The capped tracker was not given as an option.
Under the code, when fixed or other special rates are offered to a customer, the customer should be offered all available / suitable rates.When you came out of the fixed term or originally?
Under the code, when fixed or other special rates are offered to a customer, the customer should be offered all available / suitable rates.
KBC recommended customers to consider "special fixed rates". If a customer is on a tracker and the bank has the best interest of the customer and has a capped tracker - surely this capped tracker should be offered as without any doubt, the capped tracker was the most suitable product available in KBC to protect agaist rising interest rates?
Not necessarily - that only seems to be the case with the benefit of hindsight. In any event, there is no obligation under the CPC to offer multiple products to a borrower as originally suggested.
As a matter of interest, why didn't you opt for the tracker rate if you thought that was a more suitable product in your circumstances? You seem to be saying that this product was widely advertised.
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