gnf_ireland
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With Senator Quinn proposing legislation to give the Central Bank the power to cap SVR mortgage rates, is the proposal to simply get rid of the concept of SVR's (where the customer is at the mercy of the bank) or simply redefining SVR's to effectively be trackers on ECB or EURIBOR ?
What would one of these new "SVR's" look like? Would it be based at say 2% above ECB/EURIBOR and discounts applied for LTV/LTI ratios ?
With both the ECB/EURIBOR having floated around 5% historically, this would cap SVR rates at around 7%. Do people believe this would be fair ?
Also, if EURIBOR was to be used and it changes daily, how would this be 'calibrated'? Would it be baselined every quarter to reflect the average rate over the previous 3 months ?
I am still in favour of this approach, as opposed to being at the mercy of the banks, as I believe the banks will increase the SVR rates with each and every ECB rate over the next while in any event
What do others think?
What would one of these new "SVR's" look like? Would it be based at say 2% above ECB/EURIBOR and discounts applied for LTV/LTI ratios ?
With both the ECB/EURIBOR having floated around 5% historically, this would cap SVR rates at around 7%. Do people believe this would be fair ?
Also, if EURIBOR was to be used and it changes daily, how would this be 'calibrated'? Would it be baselined every quarter to reflect the average rate over the previous 3 months ?
I am still in favour of this approach, as opposed to being at the mercy of the banks, as I believe the banks will increase the SVR rates with each and every ECB rate over the next while in any event
What do others think?