Duke of Marmalade
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newborn I don't really know what McW means by debt for equity swap.
Let's say a punter has a mortgage of 300k on a property worth 200k.
Let's say bank takes 50% ownership, does it write down mortgage by 150K or 100K? If the former, then that is 50K debt forgiveness. If the latter then no debt forgiveness yet, but if the bank foregoes rent for the next 20 years on its 100k share of the property that equates roughly to a gift of 50K (indeed it should be taxed as a gift).
It is negative equity which is making this debt crisis potentially much worse than in previous recessions. Not because this time round there are more people who can't afford to keep up the payments but because of the strong temptation for strategic default, which was not present in times past.
newborn I think there is an element of forgiveness there. The bank has acquired an asset currently worth 133K (2/3rds of 200K) but has forgiven 200K of mortgage, that looks like a gift or forgiveness, call it what you will, of 67K. Now for the transaction of itself to have no forgiveness aspect would mean the bank owning the full property.I would envisage it going to whatever leval was sustainable and the split of ownership reflecting this. i.e in your example if 100k was the only mortgage they could afford the Bank would own 66.66% and the borrower 33.33%. which is zero forgiveness now keeps people in their homes with some equity interest
So yes homes are not assets in my view.
Homes are essential to life on the coldest weekend of the winter so far its horrible to sit on your couch in front of your fire thinking about all the people who should be thrown out on street.
newborn I think there is an element of forgiveness there. The bank has acquired an asset currently worth 133K (2/3rds of 200K) but has forgiven 200K of mortgage, that looks like a gift or forgiveness, call it what you will, of 67K. Now for the transaction of itself to have no forgiveness aspect would mean the bank owning the full property.
newborn I just read Matthew Elderfield's speech where he talks about split mortgages. He explains one version of this as follows, taking our example.
Split the mortgage into the 100K that can be afforded and "warehouse" the other 200K which rolls up with interest. This seems interesting and has the potential in some cases to square the circle. The customer has not given up any ownership. She can afford to service the new mortgage and on the face of it the bank still has a fully performing loan.
Of course a lot depends on what happens to house prices but it is not unreasonable that over the next 20 years, house prices will rise significantly thus covering the rolled up warehouse mortgage and there is also a good possibility that the person will once again be able to service a mortgage similar to the original, after all she used to be able to afford it and at much higher interest rates, in which case she can "buy back" the warehoused mortgage.
I presume Fiona Muldoon was lambasting the banks for not being more innovative like that rather than for not engaging in wholesale debt forgiveness.
......There is no proof or statistics showing that some people are defaulting on purpose. Its quite possibly made up by those who want the status quo to remain as it is.
at Pied Piper....
sure, we'll just keep paying for everyone...line them up, who's next to get paid off. Eventually the whole thing will collapse and what then
You mention the case I referred to as being an 'economic decision'....there'll be lots of them
No one will be homeless, no need for the massive hysterics....if you can't afford a 2k mortgage in a NE house, then perhaps you can afford a 1.2k rental. Examine each case on its merits.
There's no shame in renting or perhaps even buying a smaller house, or God forbid moving into 1 of the BTL's a lot of those in trouble have in a less desirable location
But there simply cant be massive debt forgiveness, not while the asset is retained. No way
NE is only important if you plan to sell.
Importer, what exactly did McWilliams say on the LLS? Very little about debt forgiveness, lot's about Granny's good room. What I think McWilliams is saying, but I am not sure, is that we should tell Merkel et. al. to stuff their loans, we can't pay, we are leaving your euro. I can understand why you hate to admit agreeing with that.Much as i hate to admit it, Mc Williams is spot on (again)
This is how McWilliams sees McWilliams, a latter day Copernicus who originally gets ridiculed, then gets violently attacked, until finally his genius is recognised as the universal truth. Well, three and half years later and "leaving the euro" is more ridiculed than ever by everyone. This period of ridicule must be unusually frustrating for our long suffering prophet.McWilliams in Indo said:What can we do about this? The obvious answer is to leave the euro, reinstitute our own currency, allow it to plummet to reflect the real competitive position of our ruined, feeble economy and start again. The vast majority of economists and commentators say this is not possible. In fact, they ridicule those who suggest that this might be worth entertaining.
Let me just remind you that the vast majority of economists and commentators believed the “soft landing” mantra. New ideas go through a cycle. First they and their proponents are ridiculed, then they are violently attacked and only then are they accepted as a universal truth. I suspect the same will happen to the idea of leaving the euro.
But Delboy that's exactly what we did with bond holders lined them up and paid them off!!
This is how McWilliams sees McWilliams, a latter day Copernicus who originally gets ridiculed, then gets violently attacked, until finally his genius is recognised as the universal truth. Well, three and half years later and "leaving the euro" is more ridiculed than ever by everyone. This period of ridicule must be unusually frustrating for our long suffering prophet.
Warren Buffett.After all, you only find out who is swimming naked when the tide goes out
There are cases before the courts which show clearly that people, especially those with BTL's in NE, are pocketing the rent and have stopped paying mortgages.
There's even a case study on 1 of the forums here where someone discusses this about their brother I think it is.
What cases what statistics thats all hearsay and simply an assumption maybe its you who is a little innocent. The person here was suggesting suspending payments and saving the cash to buy another house and balance it out which was an economic decision.
why should you be allowed to keep it
What are you do you really want to play god? Get a grip how and I keep asking this how are all these homeless people going to make your life better or the economy better or society better, it won't. A couple of thousand damanged kids will make society a much more dangerous and ugly place than it already is.
Why should those that sat out the madness or had the sense to buy smaller more affordable houses, now have to pay for this....
Hello you are paying for russian bond holders whose names you dont even know you are paying county managers more than the salary of Obama and Kenny combined, the dude running the FAI is getting more than a couple of european leaders together. None of this bothers you, you are doing nothing about it but you want ordinary hardworking Irish people to be made homeless?? And you think I am a little soft and innocent come on now!!
Your asking me do I read the papers did you read that PTSB, Ulster Bank and so on are buying back their bonds, ie buying back the loans. Why would they be doing that ask yourself some more difficult questions than is that fecker up the road got away lightly, and you might find the answers a lot more enlightling and less harmfull than running around with the paint can to thow out the unworthy.
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