Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I was asked this today and I didn't know the answer. I said it was due to the lack of security, but that argument doesn't stand up to scrutiny.
Say I have a house worth €500k and a mortgage of €200k.
I want to buy a house for €600k.
Why would the lender not give me a loan for €600k secured on the house I purchase + cross secured on my existing home?
I have €800k of loans on €1.1m of property.
I could act irresponsibly and not sell my own home as agreed. But I would think that is rare enough.
Of course, if house prices crash before I sell my existing home, I could be in trouble with a huge loan I could not afford.
But if I have exchanged contracts for the sale of my own home, then surely a 100% mortgage on the new property would not be risky?
Did the lenders get caught out by bridging loans going bad?
Brendan
Say I have a house worth €500k and a mortgage of €200k.
I want to buy a house for €600k.
Why would the lender not give me a loan for €600k secured on the house I purchase + cross secured on my existing home?
I have €800k of loans on €1.1m of property.
I could act irresponsibly and not sell my own home as agreed. But I would think that is rare enough.
Of course, if house prices crash before I sell my existing home, I could be in trouble with a huge loan I could not afford.
But if I have exchanged contracts for the sale of my own home, then surely a 100% mortgage on the new property would not be risky?
Did the lenders get caught out by bridging loans going bad?
Brendan