Okay - let's modify the plan - rules in the Amnesty that preclude you from availing of a fixed rate from the same bank for a specified period of time.
Your other arguments seem to be based on the presumption that the banks will all be nationalised. How would you feel about this suggestion if this does not transpire, or if it is implemented prior to any such nationalisation?
The reason why people are having a difficulty with fixed rate mortgages right now is because of the reduction in TRS on mortgage interest payments as announced in the budget.
If the Government can suddenly decide to change its TRS policy due to unprecedented economic circumstances, then there is absolutely no reason why they can't ask the banks to change their fixed rate policies (also due to unprecedented economic circumstances).
we are in a position where we will probably lose our home!
If anyone on here is in real difficulties and defaults on their mortgage repayments, then YES you will get out of your fixed rate.
Is that a definite or mere speculation?.
If the Government can suddenly decide to change its TRS policy due to unprecedented economic circumstances, then there is absolutely no reason why they can't ask the banks to change their fixed rate policies (also due to unprecedented economic circumstances).
I'm stuck in a fixed rate and feel really angry over it. My bank manager when I asked to change said I'd signed a contract and basically tough........ Howecer banks signed contracts too and all their debt is being cleared for them just like that. They should be told as circumstances are so unusual at thios time to let people out.
Are you getting mixed up between 'actual value' and 'book value', Liam? There is a huge difference between those two figures.Yes but it appears that NAMA will be buying the debts for less than actual value. So the banks will have to write down the value of these debts to some degree.
It's not luck, Manda. Both you and I made conscious decisions to go with a tracker, knowing the risk that this carried. There is no way that those who took other risks should now be bailed out at the expense of the taxpayer.I am lucky enough to be on a tracker (ECB +.5% for the life of the mortgage)
I think the once off option for people to come off their fixed rates would be a great idea, though I do think people are trying to blame the government/banks instead of simply just saying they made the wrong choice. Mea Culpa!
Would those proposing a release for fixed rate mortgages also propose a release for those who over-borrowed, and are now unable to pay back due to the amount they borrowed?
Hear, hear! Those on trackers took the risk of being at the whim of ECB rates, those on variable took the risk of being at the whim of their respective banks, those on fixed opted for a different sort of risk - they opted for stability and gambled on a rising market which hasn't come to pass. It isn't enough to declare now "unprecedented" and decide you want something different to what you signed up to. There isn't any clause in your contract to allow you to do that. Mortgages always carry risk. Despite the last few years protracted growth and almost universal employment it is always possible to lose jobs, lose income, be hit with new taxes, bear the brunt of punishing interest rate rises (or in this case drops), etc. In other words, these aren't unprecedented events, even bank nationalisations, credit issues aren't unprecedented. It is just that a sizeable proportion (perhaps even a majority) of people on fixed rate mortgages are probably in their twenties or thirties, recent property purchasers, stretched to achieve the mortgage anyway with little or no experience of truly hard times (no different from myself there) and now surprised that the world hasn't continued down the path it seemed to be in 2007 (although by that stage the credit crunch was already past infancy).It's not luck, Manda. Both you and I made conscious decisions to go with a tracker, knowing the risk that this carried. There is no way that those who took other risks should now be bailed out at the expense of the taxpayer.
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