Brendan Burgess
Founder
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According to recent articles by Niall Brady in the Sunday Tribune and Eoghan Williams in the Sunday Independent, ACC Bank has been lending money to its customers to invest in tracker bonds. Irish Life is due to launch a similar product in the coming days.
According to Niall Brady:
Eoghan Williams says:
So IFSRA is concerned about the lack of transparency in tracker bonds? But it has no objection to lending to invest in these products?
I don't know or need to know the detail of these products, but they are deposit based products. You cannot borrow to invest in a deposit based product and expect to make money. It just does not make sense. To make it worse, the return on the tracker will be subject to 20% Dirt or 23% exit tax.
IFSRA should proactively stop them before they are launched.
Brendan
According to Niall Brady:
An IL&P spokesman said the product had already been submitted to the Irish Financial Services Regulatory Authority for approval, adding that the government’s financial watchdog had not raised any concerns about consumers borrowing to invest in products that are linked to stock market performance.
Eoghan Williams says:
Speculation is intense that similar loan schemes are under investigation by IFSRA. Irish Life says it has submitted its plans to IFSRA and has net no objection. IFSRA has a policy of not commenting on its investigations, but the regulator is understood to be concerned at the lack of transparency prevalent in tracker bonds
So IFSRA is concerned about the lack of transparency in tracker bonds? But it has no objection to lending to invest in these products?
I don't know or need to know the detail of these products, but they are deposit based products. You cannot borrow to invest in a deposit based product and expect to make money. It just does not make sense. To make it worse, the return on the tracker will be subject to 20% Dirt or 23% exit tax.
IFSRA should proactively stop them before they are launched.
Brendan