sonar said:Well, in that case we can expect lots of media coverage as our leaders speak on the issues of responsible lending, over indebtedness and the
unprecedented risks that Irish borrowers now face.
Or...maybe not, wrong country eh ?
Marie said:By the way there are other implications to all this, much much broader than housing and construction. I know a number of people who are in process of withdrawing their savings from Irish financial institutions; they would have too much to lose as the risk of 'bust' grows.
Banks only risk is if prices fall below the initial cost of the house minus whatever the person has paid back in interest and loan repayments.Marie said:If banks and financial institutions 'own' - by dint of the mortgages they hold - large amounts of property, how can they survive a bust if the value of those mortgages drops quickly by up to one-third
whizzbang said:It is an interesting question thought, anyone else got any details on how the banks see this?
Any of the banks mortgage customers who took out their loans a few years back have sufficient equity to prevent the property being worth less than is owed,even if some mortgages taken out in last few years before a correction were worth less than outstanding mortgage most people would continue to pay their mortgage for fear of losing home,its only where incomes drop substantially due to something like mass unemployment that the banks dont get paid.whizzbang said:Banks only risk is if prices fall below the initial cost of the house minus whatever the person has paid back in interest and loan repayments.
If someone gets a 300k mortgage and over a few years pays back 100k to the bank then the bank only really is at risk if the property value falls below 200k.
The only property they really stand to lose on are those bought in the last 3 years is my guess. These would have to fall to the original price 3 years ago and then also fall by the amount of repayments the bank has recieved. I guess that would cover a 30% to 40% drop. This is all speculation but I guess it might be how the banks calculate their exposure.
*edit* this is all based on the assumption that people hand back the keys of prices drop significantly. As the poster above says, if they keep paying the banks are sitting pretty.
It is an interesting question thought, anyone else got any details on how the banks see this?
bearishbull said:Buying a house for 500k on 100%mortgage over 35 years(assuming an average 5% mortgage rate) is costing you nearly a million euro in todays money, so house has to double after inflation over 35 years to breakeven.
Its actually €32,000 of personal debt according to the [broken link removed]and the other €35000 is business debt .walk2dewater said:€67,333 of PERSONAL debt for every single living person in Ireland .
xe.com Universal Currency Converter ® Results Live [broken link removed] as of 2006.07.01 16:52:53 UTC.
20,000.00 GBP United Kingdom Pounds = 28,912.95 EUR
Euro 1 GBP = 1.44565 EUR
1 EUR = 0.691732 GBP
The AVERAGE IRISH PERSON NOW OWES 10% MORE THAN THE AVERAGE BRITISH PERSON
Actually i factored in inflation using the mortage calculator at www.jeacle.ie/mortgage the real interest on 500k for 35 years @ average 5% is 333k in TODAYS money, i dont think this calculator takes inflation into account on principal repayment element of the mortgage repayments,the 500k borrowed is reduced by inflation rate after every principal repayment but im too lazy to work it out!room305 said:Not necessarily. Your mortgage isn't inflation adjusted so your house only needs to double in price in nominal terms to break even.
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