Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I applied was offered a variable rate at first 0.3% higher than available to new business(drop of .25% for us) and when I pushed for a fixed rate they came back 0.5% higher than new business rate drop of .5% for us)
"Fixed rate repayment is applicable for the fixed rate period only. After the fixed rate period, the prevailing new business LTV variable rates apply to the mortgage amount; this rate will be determined by the Loan to Value at initial drawdown."
@pguyo was you mortgage drawn down pre 2019, and is it your home rather than a buy to let?2) Pguyo has been told the very opposite
I wonder can you switch from old ICS to new ICS?
Then as a new customer you would get the new customer rates.
Not sure why they make such a distinction.
Brendan
This is the one company. ICS old or new. They cherry picked the performing mortgages from B of I. We had no say in our mortgage being sold to Dilosk and they have decided to discriminate against us.
Existing owner occupier mortgages originated under Dilosk’s ICS Mortgages brand can avail of our new fixed and variable rates, subject to our lending guidelines.
We had no say in our mortgage being sold to Dilosk and they have decided to discriminate against us.
Is the part in bold the part that ICS are using to deny @pguyo the new-business rates? I.e., do the "guidelines" refer to the rate review process that pguyo previously described?Existing owner occupier mortgages originated under Dilosk’s ICS Mortgages brand can avail of our new fixed and variable rates, subject to our lending guidelines [emphasis added].
a question and answer session on the phone while a customer service agent records your answers in relation to current income, expenditure, loans, savings, kids etc.
Hi Brendan,I am not sure what the lending guidelines have to do with it other than Loan to Value? That is the only criterion used to decide rates.
Brendan
LTI and disposable income are not an issue.Hi Gordon
The 3.5 times income test is used only to approve or reject a loan.
I would have no problem with a lender incorporating the LTI in setting their rates, but I don't think any of them do. (I have an idea that some lender does not offer all rates to people who get an LTI exemption, but I can't remember which one.)
Avant uses both LTV, and for the One Mortgage, the mortgage term. So a 15 year loan is cheaper than a 30 year loan with the same LTV. But I think that is the only non-LTV criterion used for setting rates.
Brendan
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