Not to mention that another bank turned her down for half the amount she eventually borrowed. The OP is claiming that the "mortgage experts" misled her, but skips over the bit where a different set of "mortgage experts" told her she was nuts and she went ahead anyway.I am sorry I do not have sympathy for this lady but she had multiple opportunities before this to figure out she could never pay back the loan and she should have acted then.
There is this woman purchasing a house in the west, for about €550000.
No, it was not off a family member or friend. Not her family member anyway. 11 years ago, houses in nice scenic areas were often in the ball park of €400,000, 500,000 or Clamballs guess of 550k.Out of Interest did she buy house off family member a 3 bedroom house in the condition stated appears to be over priced for 11 years ago
The people who done well out of the transaction were the banker and his cousin the valuer: they would not have got their commission if they submitted correct facts and figures.Someone did well out of transaction the problem is she over paid even allowing for the prices of houses 11 years ago you
Almost €200,000 in interest. When taking out the loan the banker said her salary would be much higher in 10 years time and also she could always roll over for another 10 year interest only period.So here she is 10 years later and she has paid €220,000 in interest but not a penny off the capital.
She remembers it very often, not just once a year. Of course she heard of the banking crisis. Her salary and take home pay was reduced as a result of bank mismanagement. She has not married or had kids or gone out much as a result of financial worries.She only remembers this once a year when she gets a statement from the bank. She has never heard of the banking crisis
She had not the money to pay off the capital years ago. Because the house more than halved in value during the crises, then was not the time to sell. Even now it is worth a lot less than she paid for it at the top of the bubble. Shortfall of maybe €180,000. Maybe if it was a 5 bedroom with double glazing it would be worth more?It does not ring true, she should have contacted the bank years ago to begin paying off the capital, or sold the house to lessen her losses.
I said her own bank refused her the money. The banker who did lend the money only could do so because he mislead his superiors about her salary in the loan report ( by over €60,000 ) and because the valuer lied about the quality of the security (5 bedroom instead of 3 bedroom, double glazing instead of all but one single glazed etc).The OP is claiming that the "mortgage experts" misled her, but skips over the bit where a different set of "mortgage experts" told her she was nuts and she went ahead anyway.
I said her own bank refused her the money.
She did not know of the fraudulent bank scheme until many years after she took out the loan, when she obtained her file after paying €6.35She was a willing participant in the scheme.
Her bank would not lend her the money. Who she did borrow of assured her they had examined her figures after she gave them her P60, payslips etc. That bank said she could afford the loan.She knew from her own bank that she couldn't afford the loan
As said before, she did not know of the fraudulent bank scheme until many years later.unless she's a complete idiot, she knew that the figures had been twisted to nake her eligible for the loan.
So now these so-called "mortgage experts" are also experts on the level of nurses' salaries in the far future? He couldn't possibly have known that and if she had an ounce of common sense she must have known he couldn't have known that. Also, she knew the level of interest repayments from day one, so she knew she was going to spend 200 grand on interest payments in the first ten years. That's nothing to do with being misled, nothing to do with the fall in property prices, nothing to do with the recession. That is what she voluntarily signed up for. And you're telling us that she actually took comfort from being told she could roll this over and spend another 200k, and still not have paid a penny off the loan or owned a single one of those single-glazed window panes. What is she, some kind of eejit? When did she think she was going to repay the loan? Even ignoring what she was told, and whether she was misled on certain issues, she had enough information right there in front of her before she put pen to contract to be easily able to tell that this was a crazy, crazy decision from day one. Do you accept that?When taking out the loan the banker said her salary would be much higher in 10 years time and also she could always roll over for another 10 year interest only period.
It is more than just wrong. As asked before, what is the difference between a bank employee who while working defrauds his superiors (and the bank shareholders) by a misleading loan report or valuation, for personal gain (commission, bonus, promotion or whatever) and a supermarket shop employee who steals a single bar of chocolate while working, for personal gain, from his employer? The supermarket employee got fired, even though the sum involved was very small, say a euro.
So now these so-called "mortgage experts" are also experts on the level of nurses' salaries in the far future?
He actually got paid a bit more than that. And why did the banker pick a relation of his as the valuer? Why did the valuer get even basic facts incorrect on his valuation?The valuer probably got €120 for the valuation,
Fraud can be fraud without making reference to the method by which the fraud was carried out.It is not valid in that it makes no reference to any customer of the shop applying for a loan and accepting the offer of a loan.
Clearly according to the bankers it would be the patients fault entirelyOut of interest, how would it be if the Nurse in question gave you incorrect information regarding medication or treatment for say your 6 year old Child or your 80 year old Mother and it caused them serious harm. Would the nurse be to blame or would it be your fault for being stupid in acting on her expert advice?
And if the file shows it happened, and if the file also contained the nurses proof of earnings (copy of P60, payslips etc), then surely that is clear evidence of criminal wrongdoing? Given the bank will not explain how it happened?the credit approval process in most banks is pretty rigorous, involving several sign offs at different levels and the credit risk officers are very experienced. So the idea that someone could add 60K to a nurse's salary and that it would go unquestioned over several reviews, seems highly unlikely.
my suggestion would be to report this to the regulator (the Central Bank)
The banker assured the borrower, when he would not tell her what the capital and interest repayments would be, that she could afford them, had not nurses salaries increased so much in the previous 10 years ( 1997 - 2007 ) and anyway in 10 years she could roll over for another interest only period. Inflation would eat away at the loan amount, he said. The bank were mortgage experts and had decades of experience.
The bank was not acting in a fiduciary capacity in advancing the loan. Put simply, the bank was entitled to act in their own interests - not necessarily in the best interests of your friend.
If they had nothing to hide perhaps they can explain why the bank made out a fraudulent loan report concerning the borrower; why the valuer they appointed, a relation of the banker made out a false valuation, which was not given to the borrower like it should have been etc?if the bank has a problem with their ex-employee or their valuer then they can pursue them as they see fit. They can even report them to the Gardai if they want.
But it has absolutely nothing to do with your friend and the bank is under no obligation to explain anything to your friend about their underwriting process.
Actually I did not ignore them, but here are answers again in any case. My friend did not believe that bankers could mystically see in to the future to predict salaries, interest rates etc. The banker would and could not say what interest rates would be in 1, 2, 5 or ten years. That was the excuse he used for not telling the borrower what her capital and interest repayments would be. As said already, the banker assured the borrower, when he would not tell her what the capital and interest repayments would be, that she could afford them, had not nurses salaries increased so much in the previous 10 years ( 1997 - 2007 ) and anyway in 10 years she could roll over for another interest only period. Inflation would eat away at the loan amount, he said. The bank described themselves, and advertise themselves as mortgage experts with decades of experience.So to summarise my points again, which you ignored:
- Your friend believed that bankers can mystically see a decade into the future to predict salaries, interest rates and inflation.
[*]She knew the interest repayments before signing, and that she would spend 200k on them in the first ten years.
[*]She wanted to be able to roll over the loan and spend another 200k, and still own nothing
[*]
[*]The repayments had nothing to do with being misled, nothing to do with the fall in property prices, nothing to do with the recession.
She made changes to her lifestyle, never married or had kids or socialised much, due to financial worries. She "never did anything" says you! She kept working. She maintained the property and she paid almost 200k in interest. What more do you want her to do?never did anything over the ten years when salaries and inflation did not match expectations.
That's the bank's problem.But the bank did not act in its own interest. The bank will be at a considerable loss. The value of the property is much less than the loan amount.
Again, the bank is under no obligation to explain anything to you or your friend.Given the bank will not explain how it happened, and there is evidence of criminal wrongdoing in the file, is it time to alert the GNECB?
How about she pays back the money she owes as per the loan contract that she signed?She made changes to her lifestyle, never married or had kids or socialised much, due to financial worries. She "never did anything" says you! She kept working. She maintained the property and she paid almost 200k in interest. What more do you want her to do?
So the banker appoints his relation, the valuer to value the property. The banker charges the borrower for the valuation, and refuses to give the borrower a copy of the valuation, saying the bank is under no obligation to give a copy of the valuation, it is just for bank use only to make sure the property is as it is.the bank is under no obligation to explain anything to you or your friend.
That's the bank's problem.
Did they retire or were they sacked over similar fraudulent acts?If you think this retired banker and the vaulerer did something illegal ..
Good for you, you were probably one of the few houses in Ireland in 2004 which had broadband and had heard of online mortgage calculators. Presumably the online calculator told you how much your monthly capital and interest repayments would be. That is more than the bank told the nurse borrower.In 2004 we did a house extension, using an online calculator we plugged in our salaries and it told us that we could borrow €500K, did we borrow it? Not a chance, we looked at our ability to repay and decided no way.
Yes, buyer beware with that particular bank anyway.Buyer beware.
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