.... I think it would not provide the borrower with the attractive rate that I think is the basis of your proposal ....
Banks have lost a lot of money by offering tracker mortgages.
In a free market, they should not be forced to offer products which would be very risky for them.
I would argue, that now the taxpayer owns them, they should be forbidden from offering trackers. It is not in the taxpayers' interest for the banks to lose money.
For the same reason, the banks should not be allowed to let people out of fixed rates without paying penalties.
I still maintain that trackers are better from the consumer point of view as they are fully transparent. Consumers could choose from the banks offering the best margin.
But if this is the case then the government have no business insisting on a foreclosure moratorium as they have.
The government should compel the banks to offer a tracker mortgage. The banks can decide/compete on the margin offered and the product
So the bank just offers ECB + 10% , problem solved.
What's they point of fuelling another propoerty bubble with cheap credit when rates are low anyway?
In the light of the decision of TSB to increase their SVR I thought it might be interesting to refloat this discussion from last May.
To restate my opinion banks should be compelled through consumer leglislation to offer tracker rates (not cheap rates! just simply rates which tracks a rate).
It is interesting to note that in the early days of AAM the superiority of trackers over SVR's for consumers was regularly discussed.
I think there should be as much price transparency for the consumer as possible.The banks/taxpayers should not be forced to offer any products.
They would still have to price them way above the Standard Variable Rate that they would not be attractive.
Yes, in some regulated markets (Electricity for instance) the regulator has a role in price setting.If there is to be any increase in regulation, it would be for the FR to insist that the banks up the mortgage rate to make their products profitable again.
It made no sense ...but they did it. This is not the fault of transparent tracker pricing but rather that fact that they offered the tracker at too low a margin.It made no sense for the banks to be lending at .5% above ECB rate when they were paying more than this to attract deposits. Perhaps the FR should have stepped in then.
[FONT="]The way I look at it is that Joe Public had almost 10 years to change their existing mortgage’s into trackers. [/FONT]
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