LDFerguson
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This is good advice but it is also true that we are at a historical low, the lowest point I have ever experienced and it really can't go any lower so I'd fix. This is based on someone who remembers rates at 15%+ etc. People should bear in mind that a rate jumping from say 3 to 6 percent is a doubling whereas say a 10 to 13 is not even though it's an actual 3% increase in both cases, this is particularly important for people who have only recently begun their mortgage and most of the payments are interest.
It's also worth remembering that when rates were at 15%+, Ireland was setting its own interest rates in isolation. This was before we joined the ECB.
Yes rates are at a historical low and have little or no scope to go lower. Yes, I'd agree that rates are likely to go back up. What none of us know is when they will go back up and how far - that's the speculative bit.
The timing issue is crucially important. If someone fixes now for three years and pays a margin of 1% or more over the variable rate for the fix, they're paying 1% extra immediately. If variable rates don't start going up until mid-2010, as some economists believe, they've paid a 1% premium for security for a year. If rates creep up in quarter percent increments that the ECB tends to favour, they may never recoup what they've lost.
At the end of the three year fixed period, they're back on whatever rate is available then anyway.
LD - On the point of people saving the difference between what they are paying on the variable versus the fixed, most people do not have the discipline to do this. With deposit interest so low and especially for people in negative equity it would be better to be putting all spare case to pay down the mortgage.
I'd agree with the discipline issue. Many Irish wouldn't be too great on that score.
But I'm not so sure that paying money off the mortgage is always the best route, especially if one is in negative equity. While mathematically it's good advice, you're locking up the overpayments, never to be gained again, with the possible exception of KBC Homeloans with their re-draw facility. In these uncertain times, many people would prefer to know they have emergency access to the monies they have overpaid.
Regards, Liam