Brendan Burgess
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Buy-to-let investors who can't pay to lose valuable tracker mortgages
by Charlie Weston in today's Indo
Is this legally sound?
If a BoI customer can't make their full repayment, can the Bank just scrap the tracker? OK, the customer has breached their contract, but does that allow the bank to unilaterally change it?
The bank is under no obligation to reschedule the mortgage.
The contract might allow for penalty interest on arrears and if so, the bank is legally entitled to charge it.
If the borrower continues to be in breach of contract, the bank can seek to repossess the property, and probably should do so.
But I doubt if they can just change the rate.
They could offer the borrower an option - to switch to a SVR to avoid repossession.
by Charlie Weston in today's Indo
BANKS are starting to put the squeeze on buy-to-let investors, warning they will lose their valuable tracker mortgages if they don't strictly meet repayments.
[broken link removed] confirmed it is taking away trackers from any investors who struggle to keep up with payment demands..
...
But now the bank says any investor who has come to the end of their interest-only deal would be losing their tracker rate.
It will also strip the tracker rate from anyone wanting to negotiate a deal because they can't afford current repayments.
Is this legally sound?
If a BoI customer can't make their full repayment, can the Bank just scrap the tracker? OK, the customer has breached their contract, but does that allow the bank to unilaterally change it?
The bank is under no obligation to reschedule the mortgage.
The contract might allow for penalty interest on arrears and if so, the bank is legally entitled to charge it.
If the borrower continues to be in breach of contract, the bank can seek to repossess the property, and probably should do so.
But I doubt if they can just change the rate.
They could offer the borrower an option - to switch to a SVR to avoid repossession.