Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I think that the report overall is good, but this is not a meaningful proposal.
The examples are particulary difficult to figure out, but this is their example, simplified.
|Total|Affordable|Warehouse
Mortgage today|170k|123k|47k
Capital repaid over 5 years|-10k|-10k|
Interest rolled up over 5 years|13k|-|13k
Balance at the end of 5 years|173k|113k|60kSplitting a mortgage into two bits is meaningless. Paying capital off one bit while rolling up interest in excess of the capital repaid is meaningless. The only thing which matters is the combined figure. If you pay more than the interest charged each year, you reduce the amount outstanding. If you pay less than the interest charged each year, the amount outstanding increases.
The Deferred Interest Scheme is much simpler. It shows your capital remaining level + it shows you the amount of interest you have been charged but which you have not been able to pay.
They make the example even more complicated by assuming that the value of the house increases from €120k to €217k.
The right way to look at this is as follows:
A - The balance on your mortgage will rise if you don't pay off all your interest, and it will fall if you pay more than the interest.
B - The value of your house may change over time.
These are independent of each other. If both move in the right direction for you, your negative equity will be eliminated. If they both move in the wrong direction for you, your negative equity will increase.
It's really that simple.
The examples are particulary difficult to figure out, but this is their example, simplified.
Mortgage today|170k|123k|47k
Capital repaid over 5 years|-10k|-10k|
Interest rolled up over 5 years|13k|-|13k
Balance at the end of 5 years|173k|113k|60k
The Deferred Interest Scheme is much simpler. It shows your capital remaining level + it shows you the amount of interest you have been charged but which you have not been able to pay.
They make the example even more complicated by assuming that the value of the house increases from €120k to €217k.
The right way to look at this is as follows:
A - The balance on your mortgage will rise if you don't pay off all your interest, and it will fall if you pay more than the interest.
B - The value of your house may change over time.
These are independent of each other. If both move in the right direction for you, your negative equity will be eliminated. If they both move in the wrong direction for you, your negative equity will increase.
It's really that simple.