Brendan Burgess
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An interesting question for Jill Kerby in yesterday's Sunday Times
owner: Brother is emigrating
Apartment value: €200,000
Mortgage: €235,000
Sister, who lives in the house, wants to take over the mortgage at €235,000
Has a deposit and good job,but "our bank won't lend on apartments"
The reader asks who will lend for the apartment?
I am not sure why the sister wants to pay €35,000 more than the apartment is worth. But it could be worth doing if there is a cheap tracker and she was allowed to keep it.
Karl Deeter's advice - if I understand it correctly:
Circumvent the banks
set up a tenancy in common agreement
Sister pays you some of her deposit as a downpayment
"de facto" ownership will be transferred
I don't fully understand Karl's advice, but it's an interesting question.
I would have thought that the brother should be paying the sister €35,000 to take over the mortgage!
I would also have thought it worth really pushing the bank on this one. They don't lend on apartments, but at the moment they are lending €235k on an apartment worth only €200k, anyway. Surely it would be in the bank's interest to faciltate the sale to the sister with a mortgage less than €235k. If the sister is not as good a risk as the brother, he could guarantee the mortgage or be added to the new mortgage. They could make it even more attractive to the bank by paying off some of the mortgage if he has capital, so the apartment would move into positive equity.
If he has a cheap tracker, then the bank should bite his hand off to facilitate this sale. But, then, he should be reluctant to sell it
If the bank doesn't facilitate it or if he has a cheap tracker, he could give the sister a buy option and the sister could give him a sell option at €235,000. This could be exercized whenever the banks lend on apartments again. This would be a way of keeping the cheap tracker.
She could pay the deposit to him now as security in case she does not honour her side of the deal.
Brendan
owner: Brother is emigrating
Apartment value: €200,000
Mortgage: €235,000
Sister, who lives in the house, wants to take over the mortgage at €235,000
Has a deposit and good job,but "our bank won't lend on apartments"
The reader asks who will lend for the apartment?
I am not sure why the sister wants to pay €35,000 more than the apartment is worth. But it could be worth doing if there is a cheap tracker and she was allowed to keep it.
Karl Deeter's advice - if I understand it correctly:
Circumvent the banks
set up a tenancy in common agreement
Sister pays you some of her deposit as a downpayment
"de facto" ownership will be transferred
I don't fully understand Karl's advice, but it's an interesting question.
I would have thought that the brother should be paying the sister €35,000 to take over the mortgage!
I would also have thought it worth really pushing the bank on this one. They don't lend on apartments, but at the moment they are lending €235k on an apartment worth only €200k, anyway. Surely it would be in the bank's interest to faciltate the sale to the sister with a mortgage less than €235k. If the sister is not as good a risk as the brother, he could guarantee the mortgage or be added to the new mortgage. They could make it even more attractive to the bank by paying off some of the mortgage if he has capital, so the apartment would move into positive equity.
If he has a cheap tracker, then the bank should bite his hand off to facilitate this sale. But, then, he should be reluctant to sell it
If the bank doesn't facilitate it or if he has a cheap tracker, he could give the sister a buy option and the sister could give him a sell option at €235,000. This could be exercized whenever the banks lend on apartments again. This would be a way of keeping the cheap tracker.
She could pay the deposit to him now as security in case she does not honour her side of the deal.
Brendan