Dreadful idea, recipe for disaster and losing a friend. I don't even know where to start.
Dreadful idea, recipe for disaster and losing a friend. I don't even know where to start.
I can only this as an appalling idea from your point of view. If you have a decent income why not look into buying something on your own. Please do go with the idea contained in your original post
Well from the point of view of parents giving a gift of money to help a child get on property ladder, the bank usually looks for letter from parents saying it is a gift with no strings and that they have no financial interest in the house. Obviously that would not suit your situation and I imagine it would be more clearcut to have you on the mortgage and deeds. Your friend would not be much more than a tenant still, in theory he still couldn't hang a picture without checking with co-owner if it was okay to drive a nail in the wall. A slight exaggeration obviously but nevertheless he would not own his own home and if that is what he wants then this is no better an alternative than renting.
I don't understand that, are you saying that joint ownership of any kind is no better than renting? Surely he would benefit from any rise in the value of the house? And obviously would eventually live in the house rent free when his mortgage is paid off? Both of which will never happen if he continues to rent...
To my surprise, he doesn't quite see this as a good opportunity, for the following reasons :-
1. He feels that bank will want us to be joint mortgage holders, and will view my cash half as just a joint deposit. So I would be liable for his mortgage in event of default (beyond the resale value of the whole house).
2. He doesn't see why I would get the tenants rent. His point here is somewhat confused, mainly centred on the rent being possibly more than I am earning on the money on deposit.
3. He seems to think that the bank, beyond wanting my half of the house, will also want some or all of my current property as collateral. Surely not!
I had another friend want to go halves on what would have been both our first houses years ago and I chickened out. I still regret that, we would have made a fortune
I think its a terrible idea. I cant possibly see a bank going for it.
Lets pretend property goes up in value (I feel like laughing when I type that - I have learned my lesson the hard way!).
The property is 100k. You put in 50k cash. He puts in 50k mortgage. The term of the mortgage is 10 years.
After the 10 years when the mortgage has been discharged you sit back and look at your options. The house is now worth 120k. You have spent 50k on it. He has spent 50k plus mortgage interest of say 12k. So the house has so far cost him 62k, and you 50k. In the meantime you have been pocketing 250 euro a month rent from the tenant. So in 10 years you have made back 30k on your original 50k.
You sell it for 120k. So, you spent 50k cash, made 30k on rent and now 60k on the sale - so a profit of 40k for you.
He spent 50k mortgage + 12k mortgage interest and made 60k on the sale so he has a loss of 2k.
Its never an equal situation if one person pays cash and one pays mortgage. Plus the cash payer wants to take full advantage of the rent being paid. Its all in your favour. And you want him to take all of the liability.
If I were him Id run for the hills.
Dear God - I think you may have gone to the same school of economics as him
If you think you've made a profit if you have more than your original investment after ten years then I want to borrow some money off you! Obviously there is the foregone profit of whatever else I might have done with the money over the period. At the very least, lets say I'd stuck in a 10 year state bond and get the approx 4% interest rate (after tax!) that would give me 74,000. So selling for 60,000 + 30,000 would be a return of 16,000 over and above base state saving rate over 10 years (actually, taking tax into account I'd probably be about evens w a state bond)
From his side, he has paid 62,000 over the 10 years, which averages out at 512 a month. So, for €12 more a month than he is currently paying in rent he has a lump sum of 60,000 at the end of 10 years - enough to give him a good start on his next house. Another way to look at it - if he saved that €12 extra each month, again at 4%, he would have €1800 at the end of 10 years (compounded annually). So by instead putting it into a house he makes a profit of over 60,000 - the other 500 each month is something he is already spending for the same benefit of living in a house.
Finally, I can't see how I want him to take all the liability? In fact, I am offering to take more than my half of the liability by letting him use the whole house as collateral to obtain a mortgage for his half of the loan. If we need to sell and the value of the house has fallen then all of the sale price would be used to pay off his mortgage (not just his half of the sale proceeds).
As I see it, if I was in the situation of effectively never being able to afford a house (he lives in Dublin and is adamant that a single man with no savings and 40k a year will not get a mortgage) and someone offered me this deal I'd be running down the hill to bite their hand off
House was £90,000 at the time (mid 90's) and subsequently sold for 700,000+ in the boom. Of course the question is - would we have sold at the heightAre you joking ?
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