By right there should be a lot more repossessions than at present.
Not a lot to be gained by a re-posession. Bank strategy in most cases is to obtain co-operation from clients by placing the units on the market as a "voluntary" sale. Rental income is frequently sufficcient to cover the interest on the loan & some small principal reductions. Re-posession is only a last resort and benefits neither the Bank nor the client.
I worked for a debt management company in the earlier days of the downturn. I no longer work there but my partner still does. From experience, there are very few going out of their way to default on mortgages.
Didn't people lie about their earnings when looking for inflated mortgages prior to the bust ? I'd suggest that people are saying they owe moneylenders, family members money or education costs for the kids etc.
So when the banks make the same assumption here they are wrong ?When people lied about their income to get mortgages the banks knew full well they did. But that was to get a mortgage.
But people who want the bank to believe they are broke will say this. Same for the family member and the school lunches. Do you really think that people who engage in pretending that they cannot pay will actually tell the truth when asked to ? Just to be clear here, the genuine people (i.e. the majority of those in arrears) would not be resorting to this.I don't think people who bought investment properties go to moneylenders.
You are the first person with direct experience. And of those who default on mortgages could you give us an idea of the situations these people are in. Can they afford to pay and are they hiding their income.
From the small bit I read, it's a case of a private company buying a third of your house and lessening the risk, bit like the Affordable Housing scheme but without having to pay rent on the third you don't own. I think what they are propsong is that they get a third of the house on sale.I read about a new mad scheme yesterday. Whereby if you owed 300K on your PPR but could only afford repayments on 200K that an arrangment could be made on this, and when eventually the property was sold you pay back the 100K out of the equity. What about banks wiping off 100K of debt and letting people off that giving them an incentive to continue trying.
Do you have a link to this? It seems weird as it could only really work where there is positive equity (of at least the amount of the loan/buyout share) unless the banks agree to a write-off if the house is sold before the mortgage is repaid and why would they do that?From the small bit I read, it's a case of a private company buying a third of your house and lessening the risk, bit like the Affordable Housing scheme but without having to pay rent on the third you don't own. I think what they are propsong is that they get a third of the house on sale.
Debt forgiveness while allowing the borrower to retain ownership of the asset would be incredibly unpopular and would have major moral hazard issues. The only debt forgiveness that has a chance of being acceptable is if the asset is forfeit - even then there is some moral hazard but not as much.What about banks wiping off 100K of debt and letting people off that giving them an incentive to continue trying.
Why can't you edit? The function was working fine this morning. And I just edited this...As an aside, it is most annoying not being able to edit and correct my spelling.
The only debt forgiveness that has a chance of being acceptable is if the asset is forfeit - even then there is some moral hazard but not as much.
I've no silver ball but you are assuming the house is only worth at best the same price as today in 30 years time. As I understand it they are not liable for the 100k (using your example), the company that buys out the 100k have a 33% share in the property. So in order to but the 33% back they would pay the market price whatever that may be.Elcato, with this scheme there is no benefit to the homeowner. Take a house with 300K mortgage and 100K does not have to be repaid. They continue to repay the 200K for the next 30 years. They are now 60 years of age and house is worth 100K, maybe 150K/200K.
I’m sure it makes lovely sense to those who would benefit but it makes no sense to me. For a start, there would be massive issues about who decides what’s ‘affordable’? Is it ‘affordable so you’ve enough left to eat and live frugally’ or is it ‘affordable while having a nice standard of living’?I think we are beyond that Orka, taking all the houses off everybody in arrears doesn't make sense. And who is going to buy them. A partial write down of their mortgages where people can afford to repay a certain percentgage makes more sense.
Eddie Hobbs tweeted an apt description of the people who are determined that their fellow citizens must suffer (while we pay all the debts of others back)
Another inane soundbite from Eddie... Who are the ‘Let them drown brigade’? I don’t hear any clamouring to hang people out to dry or leave them in permanent misery. Not wanting to give some individual citizens free assets at a cost to other individual citizens doesn’t mean not wanting to find fair and decent ways of helping people in financial distress."Let Them Drown brigade agenda for consumer insolvency"
Debt forgiveness for Ireland Inc. will come when we sort out our current account spending.It has to be debt forgiveness or we all drown..........we cannot cut our way out of this despite what the Let Them Drown brigade say.
And back to the original point of this thread, can you imagine the extra number of people who would develop 'financial problems' to get a big chunk off their mortgage? A 100K ‘gift’ is quite an incentive.
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