LDFerguson
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Let's forget the "falling market" bit for the moment and discuss the pros and cons of interest only mortgages.
People buying their first home have very big expenses in the first few years. I recommend that they start with an interest-only mortgage.
A repayment mortgage is a form of saving and people should suspend saving during periods where they have abnormal expenditure e.g. just after buying a house or during maternity leave or unemployment.
I also recommend that the overall strategy should be to get your mortgage down to a comfortable level. In particular, you should do this before you start a pension.
If someone assumes further short term falls in Irish house prices, does the strategy change? Well if you make this assumption, then you should defer buying a house!
If you have bought a house and the price of it has fallen, then getting the mortgage down to a lower Loan to Value is a higher priority than it would otherwise have been.
Brendan
I do know that that 08 x 2 BMW Family next door pay the same mortgage as me on a 900k house, have 2 kids and plenty of vacations and the sound we hear on a regular basis is the arguments about having no money for kids shoes.
Compund interest is all well and good but you also have to consider the rate of inflation over the term of the pension fund.
Take inflation at 4% p.a.
the 2m the the 25y.o. has built up in a fund will only be worth about 632K in real money terms when taken into account from the time they start saving
The 886K that the 45 y.o. has build up in a fund would be worth about 425K in real money terms when taken into account from the time they start saving.
There is an old-fashioned idea that mortgages should be paid over 20 years and people should start contributing to a pension at age 21. These ideas need to be challenged and reviewed from time to time.
Interest-only for First Time Buyers falls into the same category. Again, if everyone was prudent there would be no demand for these facilities. No First Time Buyer would buy a house until they had saved a 10% deposit plus expenses plus enough money to buy furniture, cleared off any other loans and would qualify for an annuity mortgage that would cost them less than 30% of take-home pay, even after stress-testing by increasing interest rates by a percent or two.
Simple fact that if someone starts at 25, they would at 65, have over 2 million, versus someone who starts at 40 with double the money, who would have ~800k.
Liam makes a very good point, that the amount lent has no relationship to whether you are going interest only or not.
It is important to stress that the vast majority of people are able to service their mortgages. Access to finance for the majority should not be restricted because a small minority can't meet their repayments.
Slinky's neighbours are going to get into trouble, no matter what size or type their mortage is. But Slinky should not be prevented from getting a remortgage to sound proof his house, because of their lack of financial wisdom.
Brendan
The interest-only mortgage had the effect of enabling borrowers to buy property they couldn’t really afford. The product was used mainly by investors but also by consumers to fund their primary residence.
Bankers and brokers didn’t shout stop because they were paid a percentage of the size of the loans they made. The bigger the loans they sold, the higher their commissions.
Much of the focus of the media has been on the problems caused by the banks’ willingness to lend large sums for development purposes. And, while it is certainly true that this is where the vast bulk of bad lending was done, it is likely that the prices paid for development land were predicated on certain assumptions about the ability of investors and consumers to pay high prices for the apartments and loans that developers planned to build on that land.
The truth, of course, is that many of those buyers could only afford to repay a fraction of the purchase price - the interest.
In effect, interest-only mortgages enabled investors and consumers to buy property at unaffordable prices which bore no relation to the rent generated by the properties, and no relation to the borrowers’ ability to repay the loans.
In effect, interest-only mortgages enabled investors and consumers to buy property at unaffordable prices which bore no relation to the rent generated by the properties, and no relation to the borrowers’ ability to repay the loans.
To be honest I found the article confusing, almost like 2 seperate articles joined together.She seemed to miss the point completely that if you do decide to borrow for a commercial property, you should always go interest-only.
The correlation with the Affordable Housing Scheme is neatly described.When the consumer could no longer afford a property by borrowing the traditional, prudent two-and-a-half times his income, the bankers gradually relaxed the criteria to the point where it was considered normal at the peak of the boom for a borrower to take a mortgage of five or six times his income.
When the consumer could no longer afford the mortgage repayments spread over the traditional, prudent 20 years, the bankers devised new products to allow the borrowers spread the payments over first 25 years, then 30 years, then 35 years and, in some cases, 40 years.
When the consumer couldn’t afford to save the traditional, prudent deposit, the bankers came along and offered 100 per cent mortgages.
When the consumer still couldn’t afford the mortgage repayments, the bankers increasingly offered reckless ‘buy now, pay later’ products with low introductory rates leaving the consumer to face higher interest repayments when the introductory offer expired.
The bankers even launched interest-only mortgages under which the borrower paid only interest and no capital for an initial period and in some cases for a full 20 years.
As revealed in The Sunday Business Post last weekend, as many as 53,000 borrowers, many of them buy-to-let investors, took out such interest only mortgages in the last five years of the boom.
There seem to be a lot of kites being flown at the moment with regards to extending mortgages to 50 and 60 year terms, that that somehow would be in the consumers interest. Haven't we learnt anything?The only thing that prevented the sub-prime mortgage problem becoming a bigger problem in Ireland was not the intervention of the Financial Regulator, but the arrival of the international credit crunch which prevented our bankers from raising the funds that they would otherwise have recklessly lent to borrowers.
When consumers on average incomes still couldn’t afford houses, when interest rates rose after all those risky products had been unleashed, when even the banks recognised that the limits of what they could lend to consumers had been reached - or more accurately breached - the developers in early 2007 began to see the writing on the wall as consumers balked at the prices for homes and began to walk away from the property market even before the credit crunch hit hard.
The developers then leaned on the government to fund so-called affordable housing schemes using taxpayers’ money to help prop up prices. But the amount of taxpayers’ money made available was not enough to prevent the dike from bursting and pretty soon the banks found out that the developers couldn’t afford to repay their loans because they couldn’t find buyers for their developments.
[broken link removed] again takes up this issue in this weeks Sunday Business Post and, in my opinion, makes a very good stab at describing the failures of the Regulator, how the Interest Only mortgage was simply the final illogical stage on the over lending.
The correlation with the Affordable Housing Scheme is neatly described.
There seem to be a lot of kites being flown at the moment with regards to extending mortgages to 50 and 60 year terms, that that somehow would be in the consumers interest. Haven't we learnt anything?
As revealed in The Sunday Business Post last weekend, as many as 53,000 borrowers, many of them buy-to-let investors, took out such interest only mortgages in the last five years of the boom.
If you overpay for the property or if you borrow too much to buy the property, then you are in trouble anyway.
Hi Haminka
But interest only mortgages in themselves are a very useful tool for consumers. I have an interest only tracker mortgage at 1.6% and have money on deposit at 2.25% ( 3% less DIRT). I don't want to pay off my mortgage.
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