rustbucket
Registered User
- Messages
- 829
I have been a long time follower and a part time poster on this forum, particularly in relation to the tracker redress fiasco. Now that things have finally started to finalise (for most people) I just wanted to take a moment after some reflection to give credit where credit is due and to outline our own experience since this all started.
Firstly I understand that the entire tracker scandal has caused major stresses (economic, mental, physical, emotional) for some people. Some of which have had extremely unfortunate outcomes or impacts. I don't wish to belittle those in any way.
Secondly I would like to thank the hard work of people like Brendan and Padraic who have done so much in the background as well as many contributors on askaboutmoney.com which proved to be (yet again) an invaluable resource and source of support and information to so many.
Thirdly, I wish to acknowledge and give credit to both the Financial Services Ombudsman and the Central Bank. Without their decisions and decisiveness on these issues none of us would today be in the position we are in to have received life changing sums of money (granted it is money that we should never paid in the first place).
As humans we are very quick to judge and comment negatively when things don't go our way but we often forget to give praise to some of the very same people and institutions that often receive our negative energy.
To give my thoughts a little context- I am one of the very 'lucky' ones to have been part of the 5900 and even 'luckier' 300 cohort.
Myself and my wife took out a 90% mortgage in 2008 for €417K with AIB. We were first time buyers and jumped at the opportunity to own our first home (we grossly overpaid). We invested another €50k of our own money over the next few years improving it. Money sunk with no chance of a return.
We fixed at the time for 3 years but immediately broke out of our fixed rate a month later as interest rates started to tumble (this is what brought us into the 300 cohort).
We never had any issues with AIB (bar one) over the course of our mortgage with them. Our financial situation fluctuated dramatically as our incomes declined and both returned to university. AIB were always extremely accommodating except once when we received a fairly threatening letter (which we were later told was 'standard').
We sold our house in August 2016 and bought a new house for €450k in December 2016 where we still reside. New mortgage with AIB. Despite our ups and downs our financial situation had improved and they had no issues lending us a similar or slightly higher amount.
We found out to our surprise that our old account had fallen into a contractual failure when we received the 1650 cheque a few years back. We thought it must be a mistake as we had never realised we had been impacted. We thankfully weren't in the same boat as some of the stories in the papers at the time (people forced to sell homes, houses re-possessed etc).
We thought nothing more of it until stumbling upon the askaboutmoney threads on the issue and it really went from there.
Over this whole time we always thought 'wouldn't it be nice to get a couple of grand to pay for a holiday, clear the credit card etc.', not realising the magnitude of what was to come.
To get to the point:
We received our final letter today and because of the work of Brendan et al, the Karen case and the FSPO decision as well as the TME review order from the central bank we have received significantly more than 'a couple of grand'. Without the work of these people and institutions we would have thought nothing more of it once we got our cheque for €1650.
We now have a mover tracker retention rate on our existing mortgage of 2.74%. Our existing mortgage is now also under the TME review as we have technically been charged the wrong rate since Dec 2016 so we will get a refund in Dec this year plus some additional compensation. It wont be anything like what we have already received but it will be another bonus.
Do we consider ourselves extremely fortunate? Absolutely yes. Is it life changing? Absolutely yes. Would we have done anything about it ourselves? Definitely not.
I felt it was important to share and to again give credit where credit is due. The ombudsman sometimes gets a hard rap as does the central bank. They sometimes deserve it. In this instance they have given 5900 odd people a fantastic financial boost. Some went through extremely difficult times and thoroughly deserve every penny. Some in particular deserve much more and here is hoping they get it. Some (like us) appear to have gotten lucky or maybe just feel that way. None of us would have gotten anything or at best would have had to bear the brunt of an expensive court case if they did not arrive at those decisions.
We have no interest in taking this any further. We know some people do and will. I'm savvy enough to know a good deal for me when I see it.
Thank you Brendan and Padraic.
Thank you Ombudsman and the Central Bank.
Strangely also thank you to anyone working in AIB who got caught up in all this and who had nothing to do with it and who bore the brunt of all the phone calls. The poor sods were set up for a fall!
We have always banked with AIB and apart from how they have dealt with communicating this issue we have always been very happy with them. We will stay with them for now. A tracker, even at 2.74% is not to be sniffed at.
Firstly I understand that the entire tracker scandal has caused major stresses (economic, mental, physical, emotional) for some people. Some of which have had extremely unfortunate outcomes or impacts. I don't wish to belittle those in any way.
Secondly I would like to thank the hard work of people like Brendan and Padraic who have done so much in the background as well as many contributors on askaboutmoney.com which proved to be (yet again) an invaluable resource and source of support and information to so many.
Thirdly, I wish to acknowledge and give credit to both the Financial Services Ombudsman and the Central Bank. Without their decisions and decisiveness on these issues none of us would today be in the position we are in to have received life changing sums of money (granted it is money that we should never paid in the first place).
As humans we are very quick to judge and comment negatively when things don't go our way but we often forget to give praise to some of the very same people and institutions that often receive our negative energy.
To give my thoughts a little context- I am one of the very 'lucky' ones to have been part of the 5900 and even 'luckier' 300 cohort.
Myself and my wife took out a 90% mortgage in 2008 for €417K with AIB. We were first time buyers and jumped at the opportunity to own our first home (we grossly overpaid). We invested another €50k of our own money over the next few years improving it. Money sunk with no chance of a return.
We fixed at the time for 3 years but immediately broke out of our fixed rate a month later as interest rates started to tumble (this is what brought us into the 300 cohort).
We never had any issues with AIB (bar one) over the course of our mortgage with them. Our financial situation fluctuated dramatically as our incomes declined and both returned to university. AIB were always extremely accommodating except once when we received a fairly threatening letter (which we were later told was 'standard').
We sold our house in August 2016 and bought a new house for €450k in December 2016 where we still reside. New mortgage with AIB. Despite our ups and downs our financial situation had improved and they had no issues lending us a similar or slightly higher amount.
We found out to our surprise that our old account had fallen into a contractual failure when we received the 1650 cheque a few years back. We thought it must be a mistake as we had never realised we had been impacted. We thankfully weren't in the same boat as some of the stories in the papers at the time (people forced to sell homes, houses re-possessed etc).
We thought nothing more of it until stumbling upon the askaboutmoney threads on the issue and it really went from there.
Over this whole time we always thought 'wouldn't it be nice to get a couple of grand to pay for a holiday, clear the credit card etc.', not realising the magnitude of what was to come.
To get to the point:
We received our final letter today and because of the work of Brendan et al, the Karen case and the FSPO decision as well as the TME review order from the central bank we have received significantly more than 'a couple of grand'. Without the work of these people and institutions we would have thought nothing more of it once we got our cheque for €1650.
- The FSPO decision has given us approximately €10K more than the TME review (hugely beneficial for most people I imagine).
- AIB applied the FSPO decision in full to our account and paid it in cheque (as our account had closed).
- We also received a TME payment of €1845 to go towards the cost of legal advice.
- The TME review payment (which we did not get as the FSPO one was higher) included a 22% compensation figure rather than a 15% figure like most people got. This I believe was because we had restructured our mortgage a couple of times due to financial situations which may have been avoided if we were on a tracker, although this was not explained.
- We sold our house voluntarily in 2016 as we wanted to trade up. We did not have to sell unlike some people.
We now have a mover tracker retention rate on our existing mortgage of 2.74%. Our existing mortgage is now also under the TME review as we have technically been charged the wrong rate since Dec 2016 so we will get a refund in Dec this year plus some additional compensation. It wont be anything like what we have already received but it will be another bonus.
Do we consider ourselves extremely fortunate? Absolutely yes. Is it life changing? Absolutely yes. Would we have done anything about it ourselves? Definitely not.
I felt it was important to share and to again give credit where credit is due. The ombudsman sometimes gets a hard rap as does the central bank. They sometimes deserve it. In this instance they have given 5900 odd people a fantastic financial boost. Some went through extremely difficult times and thoroughly deserve every penny. Some in particular deserve much more and here is hoping they get it. Some (like us) appear to have gotten lucky or maybe just feel that way. None of us would have gotten anything or at best would have had to bear the brunt of an expensive court case if they did not arrive at those decisions.
We have no interest in taking this any further. We know some people do and will. I'm savvy enough to know a good deal for me when I see it.
Thank you Brendan and Padraic.
Thank you Ombudsman and the Central Bank.
Strangely also thank you to anyone working in AIB who got caught up in all this and who had nothing to do with it and who bore the brunt of all the phone calls. The poor sods were set up for a fall!
We have always banked with AIB and apart from how they have dealt with communicating this issue we have always been very happy with them. We will stay with them for now. A tracker, even at 2.74% is not to be sniffed at.