Brendan Burgess
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A good article by Charlie Weston in today's Indo.
Legal cases to repossess homes fall by half in two years
The number of legal proceedings issued by banks to repossess homes has halved in the past two years.
A total of 3,665 proceedings were issued across the country last year, new figures from the Courts Service show.
...
There was a 20pc fall in the past year in the number of repossession orders granted for family homes compared with the previous year. In contrast, there are around 33,400 residential mortgage accounts in arrears for more than two years.
...
"The figures show a huge drop in proceedings issued. There was never a tsunami. There was not even a high tide. And the tide is quickly receding," Mr Burgess said.
This was in reference to repeated warnings over the past few years from mortgage debt campaigner David Hall that a 'tsunami' of repossessions are on the way.
...
Mr Hall, of the Irish Mortgage Holders Organisation, defended his claims that there would be a tsunami of repossessions. He said the Central Bank-mandated tracker mortgage investigation had forced banks to delay issuing proceedings until it was complete.
Legal cases to repossess homes fall by half in two years
The number of legal proceedings issued by banks to repossess homes has halved in the past two years.
A total of 3,665 proceedings were issued across the country last year, new figures from the Courts Service show.
...
There was a 20pc fall in the past year in the number of repossession orders granted for family homes compared with the previous year. In contrast, there are around 33,400 residential mortgage accounts in arrears for more than two years.
...
"The figures show a huge drop in proceedings issued. There was never a tsunami. There was not even a high tide. And the tide is quickly receding," Mr Burgess said.
This was in reference to repeated warnings over the past few years from mortgage debt campaigner David Hall that a 'tsunami' of repossessions are on the way.
...
Mr Hall, of the Irish Mortgage Holders Organisation, defended his claims that there would be a tsunami of repossessions. He said the Central Bank-mandated tracker mortgage investigation had forced banks to delay issuing proceedings until it was complete.
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