Brendan Burgess
Founder
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https://www.irishtimes.com/business...on-performing-mortgages-sale-to-4bn-1.3392050
permanent tsb is selling loans worth €4 billion - € 1 billion of buy to lets, and €3 billion owner occupied.
This represents about 20,000 mortgages.
28% of the loan book is classified as non-performing.
"However, it also includes a large portion of so-called split loans, where repayments on part of the original mortgage have been put on ice over the long term. These loans are still seen as non-performing by regulators, even though the borrowers are adhering to their new terms."
Our refusal to allow lenders repossess homes
It must be very frustrating for permanent tsb not to have any effective sanction on borrowers who simply won't pay their mortgage. So they might well be responding to this frustration.
It makes no sense for ptsb to sell off performing split loans
These loans have a three year review clause in them. If the borrower's financial position has improved, they can move money from the warehouse into the active loan.
As many of these will be moving into positive equity, these borrowers will be more inclined to act responsibly.
There is just no logic for ptsb to sell these off.
Many loans are classified as "unsustainable" even though the borrower is meeting their repayments
The Central Bank rules do not allow ptsb to offer a restructure if the SFS does not show a sustainable solution. So if the borrower has arrears from 5 years ago but they are now meeting their repayments, it is a non-performing loan in arrears.
This is madness.
This is bad news for good borrowers
If the likes of Tanager buys a split mortgage from ptsb, they will move quickly to transfer as much as possible from the warehouse to the active mortgage.
They already tell customers that they do not offer arrears capitalisation as a solution.
They will find it very difficult to get an order for possession, but they will pile on the pressure on the borrowers and many of them will crack and just agree to a voluntary sale.
It might be good news for people in negative equity who can't afford their mortgage.
The funds which buy them are likely to offer deals
permanent tsb is selling loans worth €4 billion - € 1 billion of buy to lets, and €3 billion owner occupied.
This represents about 20,000 mortgages.
28% of the loan book is classified as non-performing.
"However, it also includes a large portion of so-called split loans, where repayments on part of the original mortgage have been put on ice over the long term. These loans are still seen as non-performing by regulators, even though the borrowers are adhering to their new terms."
Our refusal to allow lenders repossess homes
It must be very frustrating for permanent tsb not to have any effective sanction on borrowers who simply won't pay their mortgage. So they might well be responding to this frustration.
It makes no sense for ptsb to sell off performing split loans
These loans have a three year review clause in them. If the borrower's financial position has improved, they can move money from the warehouse into the active loan.
As many of these will be moving into positive equity, these borrowers will be more inclined to act responsibly.
There is just no logic for ptsb to sell these off.
Many loans are classified as "unsustainable" even though the borrower is meeting their repayments
The Central Bank rules do not allow ptsb to offer a restructure if the SFS does not show a sustainable solution. So if the borrower has arrears from 5 years ago but they are now meeting their repayments, it is a non-performing loan in arrears.
This is madness.
This is bad news for good borrowers
If the likes of Tanager buys a split mortgage from ptsb, they will move quickly to transfer as much as possible from the warehouse to the active mortgage.
They already tell customers that they do not offer arrears capitalisation as a solution.
They will find it very difficult to get an order for possession, but they will pile on the pressure on the borrowers and many of them will crack and just agree to a voluntary sale.
It might be good news for people in negative equity who can't afford their mortgage.
The funds which buy them are likely to offer deals