Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,682
A spokeswoman from MABS was on Morning Ireland
Ms O'Hara said people with tracker mortgages are feeling the pressure most.
"They were on a particularly low level [of interest] for a considerable amount of time and now that has risen seven times since last July," she said.
"They are the ones seeing the cost increase on a fairly quick basis as well.
I have no doubt that some are.
If they are on ECB +1%, their rate has increased in the last year from 1% to 4.75% - a big increase and a sudden increase.
But the last tracker mortgage was issued in 2008. If the average mortgage taken out was €200k for 30 years, the average balance is probably around €120k today, assuming that they did not use the huge savings generated in the era of really low interest rates to overpay their mortgage.
Their monthly repayment is now about €1,000 at 4.75%, of which half is interest and half is principal.
So the cost of their accommodation, is about €500 per month.
By comparison, a new home buyer taking out a mortgage of €200k today over 30 years at 4% is paying €1,200 a month of which €700 is interest.
If the tracker mortgage holder is a customer of a mainstream bank, they can fix at a lower rate than the tracker rate they are paying. ( It might or might not be advisable to do so.)
And a customer of a vulture fund could be paying an interest rate of 7% and have no options to fix that rate.
So while I have sympathy for anyone whose really cheap mortgage has increase a lot in cost, there are more pressing problems which deserve our attention.
Brendan
Ms O'Hara said people with tracker mortgages are feeling the pressure most.
"They were on a particularly low level [of interest] for a considerable amount of time and now that has risen seven times since last July," she said.
"They are the ones seeing the cost increase on a fairly quick basis as well.
I have no doubt that some are.
If they are on ECB +1%, their rate has increased in the last year from 1% to 4.75% - a big increase and a sudden increase.
But the last tracker mortgage was issued in 2008. If the average mortgage taken out was €200k for 30 years, the average balance is probably around €120k today, assuming that they did not use the huge savings generated in the era of really low interest rates to overpay their mortgage.
Their monthly repayment is now about €1,000 at 4.75%, of which half is interest and half is principal.
So the cost of their accommodation, is about €500 per month.
By comparison, a new home buyer taking out a mortgage of €200k today over 30 years at 4% is paying €1,200 a month of which €700 is interest.
If the tracker mortgage holder is a customer of a mainstream bank, they can fix at a lower rate than the tracker rate they are paying. ( It might or might not be advisable to do so.)
And a customer of a vulture fund could be paying an interest rate of 7% and have no options to fix that rate.
So while I have sympathy for anyone whose really cheap mortgage has increase a lot in cost, there are more pressing problems which deserve our attention.
Brendan
Last edited: