Releasing from the investment property would certainly, in the short term, make life easier for us.
I would also even consider releasing another 25-50k from your investment property and use that to further reduce your PPR’s mortgage just to ensure the mortgage on the PPR is as manageable as possible.
Reread the initial half dozen posts, the value of the properties isn't 920K. One property had a "value" of 520 a couple of years ago but similar propertues fail to sell for 380K now.While I do agree that Irish people like property in Tank's case he has circa 50 percent mortgages to property value, 920K value to 500K loans plus he has cash of 130 although no job. If he had said he had no cash and loans of 100 % the advice I'd give would be more like Steve D. The truth is nobody knows what will happen. And yes 2 to 3 years is too short in relation to property.
I can only go on the figures the OP posted. I assumed that the 380 referred to the 400K property. And you know well enough that I cannot talk about house prices, even if I could it wouldn't make any difference as I previously said no advisor can say what way the wind will blow. Each of us on here can only give the OP the different options. I do of course have my own opinion on it. For a risk adverse person then my advise would be to sell one of the properties and put any profits off the remaining property, keeping a servicable mortgage and enough cash for 2 years in the post office (due to the out of work scenario). If you are really really risk adverse sell the whole lot and rent. And then this leads to where do you put the money? 3% isn't going to beat inflation. What advice would you give H? And you are of course right that the value is unknown. By the way I agree with Steve D, Derkaiser and main asia. But that's the problem isn't it - nobody knows.Reread the initial half dozen posts, the value of the properties isn't 920K. One property had a "value" of 520 a couple of years ago but similar propertues fail to sell for 380K now.
The OP has 2 properties - value unknown in the current market as there are no transactions - debt of 500K, savings of 130K and no job. The OP also sounds risk averse. Base your advice on that.
DerKaiser, why should he hold onto it, really?
Yes. 100%. Once they were taken over by the UK Govt they became the safest place to put your money on deposit.Howitzer, How safe would my money be in Northern Rock? Is anything 100% guaranteed?
who knows but it's not beyond the realms of possibility. This happened in the period 00-03. The latest CSO report shows rents falling by 2.9% in August (this is usually a month where rents go up due to excess demand from students). Annualised that would be a 34.8% fall.Will rental income fall by more than 30%?
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