Brendan Burgess
Founder
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The tracker has a price promise. The Standard Variable Rate loan has no such promise and the 3% extra could increase further.
One group of people who may want to consider such an offer is those with a high level of personal debt + a tracker. It may, in some circumstances, make more sense for such people to use some or all of the cash they receive from the bank to clear that personal debt
Am I right in thinking that people with trackers who are renting out their homes will do well out of this as long as they get a fair discount for surrendering their trackers?
The capital portion of their mortgage payment would be reduced while the interest portion is increased. This means that their taxable rental income is reduced?
This ties in with another post about tax. Carry your argument to extreme - the bank could reduce the loan to a fraction of its value but charge 20% interest. What gives here is that the forgiveness of the loan should be a taxable event. In fact a reduction of a debt is defined in the Tax Acts as a chargeable event for capital gains tax purposes.Am I right in thinking that people with trackers who are renting out their homes will do well out of this as long as they get a fair discount for surrendering their trackers?
The capital portion of their mortgage payment would be reduced while the interest portion is increased. This means that their taxable rental income is reduced?
You are assuming that the bank will pay cash i.e. keeping the 100K loan outstanding but increasing the repayment rate to 5% standard variable and paying a lump sum of 24K as compensation for the increase in repayments. It is much more likely that any initiative will take the form of reducing your loan, leaving the repayment unchanged and no payment of cash. Of course, if you can then remortgage back to 100K that would release the cash.One group of people who may want to consider such an offer is those with a high level of personal debt + a tracker. It may, in some circumstances, make more sense for such people to use some or all of the cash they receive from the bank to clear that personal debt
Going back in time to 2005 (http://www.tribune.ie/article/2005/jun/12/ptsb-to-review-unfair-tracker-policy/) we see PTSB with a tracker at 3.1% and standard variable at 3.55% a .45% spread.
At some stage in the future the extra risk will go away (could be 5/10/15 years time , but will happen). At that stage the standard variable should drop back to a smaller margin over the ECB. This means that you won't be paying the extra 3% worked out in the OP for the full 20 years.
You will never again see variable rates drop to such a thin margin to the base rate.
Hi Jhegarty.
I am struggling to understand this. Is the following a correct restating of it?
"Banks have to pay a very high price to attract deposits -e.g. ECB + 2%.
As a result they have to charge their SVR mortgage holders a higher rate e.g. ECB + 4% to make a profit.
When the market returns to normal, the banks will be able to get deposits at ECB-1%.
They will then be able to lend to their mortgage holders at ECB + 1%"
We are not in normal times. But 2005 was not normal either. The Irish mortgage market was ridiculously over-competitive with some lenders offering tracker mortgages at ECB+ 0.5%.
It's very hard to see anything like this returning in the next ten years, if ever.
But your overall point is probably valid, that the 4% margin over ECB will probably drop at some stage.
In a sense this one can be removed by selling the mortgage pool to a buyer who does not have those funding costs or alternatively selling them off as a segregated pool. This is I think in essence what they are trying to do. So there isn't really a case for the banks to pay their customers to be spared these funding losses.
All in all, it is difficult to see how a rational buy out formula can be devised.
All in all, it is difficult to see how a rational buy out formula can be devised.
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