Brendan Burgess
Founder
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To put it in context, at the peak, my interest only exceeded what I am now on with a 33%/67% mix of i only and p + i over 15 years.
My quarterly interest bill is the same as a monthly payment so 3 steps forward/one step back on the treadmill.
Summary
- The potential defaults on home loans and buy to lets have been fully provided for and it is unlikely that the taxpayer will be required to put more money into the state-owned banks.
Shivvers
While BB is big enough and bold enough to defend himself, and I am sure he will do so in due course, 2 points occur:
BB was talking in the context of the potential defaults.... and the need for more capital to underwrite these.
Elderfield say that new capital will be required to meet Basle III requirements
as described below, which is not what BB was referring to.
When the wall of mortgage defaults hits ( and it is coming, no doubt about it), they will need a lot more than 3 or 4 billion.....
Most commentators seem to miss this point.The lender will lose money when the income of the borrower is insufficient to keep up the mortgage payments and the property is sold for less than the outstanding mortgage.
Economists, and people generally, are woeful at forecasting. I wouldn't pay much attention to what they say.There is no point in me doing a back of the envelope calculation to estimate what I think the losses will be. I will only get it wrong, like everyone else has so far.
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the acceleration of the mortgage crisis and the mass repossessions that will ensue after the insolvency legislation is brought in this year; the drop in house prices that will kick in when the banks flood the market with all those homes they repossessed
These people are not in arrears. The underlying value of the house is irrelvant if they can continue to pay their mortgage.Losses of just 5% on homes that are not in NE but are in arrears? That appears fanciful. A further 10% drop in house prices (and that's conservative), knocking thousands of those homeowners into NE, would decimate that provision.
I am using the Central Bank's figures for 90 days in arrears. These will be the source of the defaults. Many more are struggling, but they are paying their mortgage and will continue to do so, unless they lose their jobs.You say you have assumed that the number of 90 day arrears will eventually double to 120,000. I say that your doubled figure is probably closer to where the number of overall distressed mortgages is today.
If you check out the accounts, you will see that this is incorrect. Around 50% of PTSB's rescheduling were term extensions and reduced payments but more than interest only. For AIB, it was around 30%Those who were restructured in 09-11 were all put on interest only. When those interest only periods end, they will be in distress again,
Here are the actual arrears figuresBut the arrears problem is accelerating, as the latest central bank figures show, not slowing down.
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this breakneck acceleration
Morgan Kelly (who has been scarily accurate with all his estimates and figures, right throughout the crisis - go back and read all his stuff, it is unbelievably accurate)
The Bank of Ireland has around half the average level of mortgage arrears of the other banks. They will probably rise, but their current levels of capital would comfortably withstand a doubling in arrears and defaults.You have also discounted Bank of Ireland entirely because it is majority private owned. ... If they do, the state will have to step in once again. Although I concede that scenario is probably more unlikely than likely.
I have been the loudest voice calling for the level of unsustainable mortgages to be recognised. I have estimated to be 10,000 homes, but it may be as high as 20,000 homes. They will take place over a period of time and won't all hit the market on 1 January 2013.the mass repossessions that will ensue after the insolvency legislation is brought in this year; the drop in house prices that will kick in when the banks flood the market with all those homes they repossessed
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