shoppergal
Registered User
- Messages
- 172
I'm an absolute idiot.
Posted on here last month about how delighted I was that PTSB had allowed us to switch from a fixed rate to variable with no charge. Have just been looking through the paperwork and see that when the fixed rate was due to end in September we'd have gone to a tracker of ECB + 1.10%. What a fool.
Moral of the story: if something seems too good to be true it usually is(
Norbank, you make me laugh, the bank will only do what's good for the bank not for those pesky customers. Call in the regulator he'll sort it out, no he'll sort out you the small broker but he'll do nothing to the banks............ It's not as if the regulator is on the side of the customer now is it.
Norbank, you make me laugh, the bank will only do what's good for the bank not for those pesky customers. Call in the regulator he'll sort it out, no he'll sort out you the small broker but he'll do nothing to the banks............ It's not as if the regulator is on the side of the customer now is it.
Hang on-was the OP advised/encouraged by ptsb to switch or did they ask to switch and were merely facilitated?
The fact that the breakage penalty fee was waived is surely proof of encouragement by PTSB.
The fact that the breakage penalty fee was waived is surely proof of encouragement by PTSB.
Their main goal was to get the OP off the tracker rate not to facilitate her move to a variable rate.
No. Depending on when you took out your mortgage, some fixed rates offered a guaranteed tracker rate to fall back on; others didn't.
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