This thread on boards.ie from January 2009 is interesting. Hope it's ok to put in a link...
http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2055463142
http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2055463142
Guys, just wondering if anyone is in the same situation but further along in the process? I spoke to Padraic Kissane a few weeks ago, my documentation from PTSB finally arrived today and I'll e-mail it to Padraic's office tonight but had a question in the interim.
We did not break out of our fixed term. In Dec 2009 (month before coming off 4.79% fixed rate) we were offered a SVR, Tracker or various fixed rates, detailed below. We went for the Variable, stupidly thinking it was more affordable. Sure enough, within months, the Variable rate shot up and up.
Has anyone in the same boat either been contacted by PTSB or been advised that they're on the bank's "list"?
Just had a look at online banking and next mortgage payment is 03/08 and still at the lofty 4.5% we've been paying.
I have just come across [broken link removed] sent by the Financial Regulator to the lenders in August 2010. They were required to warn people who chose SVRs that they would lose their trackers:
View attachment 770
So it probably won't help most people in this thread.
Did anyone choose an SVR after August 2010? If you did, I think you would have a great case for getting back your tracker, if they did not give you a letter with the above wording.
Brendan
OK, I'm not sure if I'm reading the rates correct. Going on the above linked rates from the ECB, Which column should I be looking at?
From what I can make out, when we took our mortgage out in April 2007, the ECB interest rate was 3.75%. We broke out in February/March 2009 - I'm unsure which date we broke out on because the only communication I have is the instruction to them dated February, but it may not have kicked in until March or April & I don't know what rate that we were supposed to get.
They've put us on 2.3%, Which I'm guessing includes their margin. The current ECB to them is 0.05 (I think), which would mean the rate they put us on is 2.25%+ECB, but I can't find any rates to suggest they were offering this at the time.