Brendan Burgess
Founder
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If a borrower can’t switch to another provider, then it follows that he is a high-risk borrower. You would expect a high-risk borrower to pay a premium on the average market rate.
Even though though the fund that bought the book doesn’t have access to the same cheap source of funding as PTSB?
It’s not about punishing anybody - it’s about providing a degree of protection to borrowers that can’t access market rates because they are high-risk candidates.Why should you penalise the mortgage holder for this?
Yes, but which rate is applicable? Standard variable? Five-year fixed? Something else?It's very workable. ptsb's rates are published. No calculations are needed.
Yes, but which rate is applicable? Standard variable? Five-year fixed? Something else?
That’s not going to work Brendan.If they were still customers they could avail of any rate ptsb offers their existing customers, so that would be what should be offered. All of them.
The vulture fund can’t fund their book as cheaply as a deposit taking bank like PTSB.
Did the vultures just increase rates for those in arrears and restructured? Those paying their mortgages as normal were not affected.... is that right?
Brendan what you're proposing would end the market for NPL sales. No one would buy a loan portfolio if a vendor could set the interest rate forever more.They took out mortgages with ptsb, a deposit funded bank, and had a reasonable expectation that their mortgage rates would be the rates offered by ptsb.
You can't just say to them - "hard luck - your mortgage has been bought by a vulture who overpaid for them and so must recover the cost by charging you a much higher rate that you would be paying had your mortgage stayed with
As the CEO of a large vulture fund said, and I quote,Hi Coyote
1) I would prioritise consumer protection. I would not allow the sale of NPLs to result in detriment to the borrower.
2) It would not end NPL sales. ptsb would continue to charge market rates, so the vulture fund knows that they would be getting market rates.
The vultures have done very well out of Irish mortgages. They bought trackers very cheaply and now they are very profitable again.
They are getting 6.5% on ptsb SVRs . They bought them at a discount. As far as I know, they funded them in advance with long term money so I doubt that the increase in ECB rates affected them.
Brendan
Anything that undermines the ability of vulture funds to determine mortgage rates will impact the value of any future price of distressed loans.
No I'm clearly not saying that. I'm saying a response based on very pigeonholed view of the issue is in danger of making things worse not better.So scrap the Code of Conduct on Mortgage Arrears completely?
Give them a right to break fixed rate agreements or kick people off trackers?
I presume you wouldn't support either but doing so would make these loans much easier to sell.
The first priority has to be to protect consumers and the CCMA does not allow borrowers to be charged more because they are in arrears. And is what is happening here.
Brendan
Scrooge,No I'm clearly not saying that. I'm saying a response based on very pigeonholed view of the issue is in danger of making things worse not better.
If you extend your rationale could you argue that no lender, bank or fund, would have the right to set a their own rate? Under your interpretation and AIB customer could claim they are discriminated against if they don't receive the same rate as a BOI customer and the bank would have to respond based on this version of the CCMA?
I'm not against helping the borrower's this thread is about. My concern is the knock-on effects that the changes suggested would have on other borrowers. Put bluntly when you tinker with the system someone (else) ends up paying.I don't know how you could extend my rationale to that at all.
I am saying that if I take out a mortgage with ptsb I should get the rates offered by ptsb. If I take out a mortgage with AIB I should get the rates offered by AIB.
Brendan
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