I've already given the name of the only 2 lenders that'll consider this.What type of lender might entertain this?
What I would really like to do is to keep hold of property 2 and then leverage it to buy property 3, rather than sell it and buy a new property 2, then a property 3.
I would still prefer Option 2 so I can hold onto property 2, @DublinHead54 it is a nicer property and it is in a better location for me than what I would likely get if I had to replace it with a new property 2.
Dilosk and Finance Ireland, cheers! Just didn't realize you meant it originally under the scope of what I am now calling Option 2.I've already given the name of the only 2 lenders that'll consider this.
Thanks Brendan, in the interest of exploring all potential options this is an interesting one, the part where I end up with 139k in cash is escaping me but it does seem like a potential workaround for going with Option 1 in my earlier message and still having property 2 in the end.As with everyone else here, I think you are crazy to do this. A few years of seeing property prices rise, and people think that there is no risk in property. It is risky. And borrowing increases the risk.
However, here is a solution for you.
Find a friend who has €70k.
Sell him Property 2 for the market value. He can owe you the balance.
Now you have €70k - buy back Property 2 with your deposit of €70k + a loan of €130k.
You end up with €130k cash.
Downsides:
1) Stamp duty and legal fees on the two transactions.
2) You realise your Capital Gain on the sale and may have to pay CGT.
Brendan
True, but in this case despite the emotion and niceness of the property it is better from a returns point of view too so as you mentioned this is another reason to try keep it.Take the emotion out of it, you should try and keep property 2 if it is yielding more than other properties you can buy. The niceness of the property shouldn't matter in a financial decision.
Credit Unions won't touch it. They will lend for PPR only.Credit Union was also mentioned to me too, I will check these out.
They might be restricted by macro prudential measures set by Central Bank. OP would need to have 30% equity on a BTL property, which I assume is why he wishes to raise such equity from a top up loan on his PPR.Are there really no lenders prepared to do this? Even though somebody will be prepared to offer 'new loans' on properties 3 and 4 that could easily result in OP having higher total leverage?
And actually, given my assumption that a standard lender *might* entertain this ruse, change the figures on my assumed case study from assumed rates of around 4% to 7-9% (FI also indicate a rate increase in 4 weeks time on top of rates that already go well over 8%). My suggestion of it costing 500-700 a month extra even after net rent after tax, could be far more.I've already given the name of the only 2 lenders that'll consider this.
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