FA mortgage account
Hi Clubman,
I was hoping, that'd be followed by "Oh I see what you're saying..." because I know I'm not managing to explain my point too clearly...
Right, here goes a (very) simplified case study...
Bob earns net €2000 per month...
Bob spends €500 per month so has €1500 per month to sort out his mortgage.
On checking, €1500 per month would allow him to pay a 20 year mortgage.
but, €1000 per month would allow him a 35 year mortgage...
Bob wants to pay off his mortgage in 20 years but is nervous about tying up his money and fluctuations in his monthly income...
So, Bob get a 35 year current account mortgage from FA.
Each month, his €2000 gets lodged to the facility account halping to save him interest...
all going well...
Each month he spends €500 and each month €1000 gets locked in to the loan account... But there's still €500 extra in his facility account.
If he keeps this up, he will have essentially paid the interest equivalent of a 20 year mortgage and after 20 years his facility account balance will match his outstanding loan... Mechanics of what happens then I'm not sure of but he can somehow close the mortgage.
The advantages to Bob though...
If Bob only gets paid €1500 in a particular month, €1000 gets repayed to the loan account and he has the option of spending the remaining €500 anyway. He's not in any way tied to the €1500 a month that was going towards his mortgage, only to €1000.
Also, if Bob's car gets destroyed by an act of God and he needs a new one he has a balance sitting in his facility account that he can call upon without checking with FA and without having to go through the complexities of officially extending his mortgage, they're expecting him to take 35 years anyway. It also has the advantage that he can call on it for little expenses, say, €2000 for car insurance and so on...
Case study ends here...
If Bob had taken out a 20 year mortgage elsewhere he would be tied (well, more so anyway) to his repayments of €1500 per month.
Also, if he needed, say, €10k for a car, he has to jump through the usual hoops...
Assuming none of these problems arise though he's not losing any of the benefits of a 20 year mortgage. He's also getting the normal expected benefits of reduced interest from having his salary paid in and spending from the facility. But, yep, he's paying (ECB + 1.5)%
I know this is long winded, I just can't seem to explain myself (or maybe I'm just not understanding Clubman's explanation?)
And I'm supposed to be an instructor... Does anybody see what I'm saying?
saver