Mortgage Market Trend Outlook 2012
We have made a few more bold predictions in our ‘Mortgage Market Trend Outlook 2012′ and reviewed how wrong many of our 2011 forecasts were as well.
Some of the main points thus far are:
1. That mortgage lending bottomed out in 2011.
2. That IBRC may take on some tracker loan portfolios to de-risk state owned banks (as the state already owns these loans entirely anyway).
3. That rates for existing AIB borrowers will have to go up but that for new borrowers rates may come down with changes to how prices are charged depending on risk of the proposed loan.
4. That deposit rates will start to drop.
5. That up to 25,000 mortgages will be deemed ‘unsustainable’ and that the ‘won’t pay’ contingent of arrears cases may be as high as 1 in 5.
We hope you enjoy this report, we in turn hope that we get some of the calls right!
Many thanks,
Irish Mortgage Brokers
Best mortgage rates available, December 2011
This is the usual update of rates available at the moment. As you’ll notice, AIB is the leader in almost every section. However, they are not necessarily lending to every client hoping to obtain finance with them - to know if they’ll be the lender of choice you need to construct the application in a manner that will ensure it shows the best aspects of the case to them.
There are lots of other lenders out there too (we deal with the pillar banks and many others as well), so looking at ‘best rate’ is perhaps different than ‘best attainable rate’.
Anyway, here is the list, if you ever want mortgage advice give us a call! 016790990
Best variable rate mortgage: AIB 3.24% (with one for 2.84% < 50% LTV)
Best 1yr fixed rate mortgage: AIB 4.15%
Best 2yr fixed rate mortgage: PTsb 3.1% < 50% LTV, otherwise AIB 4.65%
Best 3yr fixed rate mortgage: AIB 4.88%
Best 5yr fixed rate mortgage: PTsb 3.7% < 50% LTV, otherwise its AIB 5.35%
Best 10yr fixed rate mortgage: n/A 12/2011
Oh, one final thing, AIB called everybody into a meeting at their head office about two weeks ago, the resounding message was that they are going to be lending more in 2012 but prudence will remain and prices will change (upwards to more comparable market rates).
Tracker mortgages: make sure you don’t miss out!
Yesterday the Examiner broke a story about tracker mortgage holders potentially missing out because they are not reading their terms and conditions. This is an issue we have seen first hand in our company, but it wasn’t due to not reading the terms and conditions, it was down to a bank error.
Recently Bank of Ireland had to put 2,000 accounts back on trackers after they mistakenly took them off and onto variable rates. AIB made the same mistake 214 times and PTsb did it 53 times.
In our own brokerages case we saw something similar recently with PTsb, they insisted to a client that no tracker was available. Then, only after the client remortgaged did they admit their error and offer it back. We represented the client in this case and insisted that all costs were also covered in reinstating the mortgage. This means paying solicitor fees, losses on clawbacks, breakage fees for the fixed rate undertaken etc.
Where this happens has tended to be where people come off of fixed rates and in their ‘rate choice letter’ (a letter you get c. 60-90 days before fixed rate expiration) the tracker is not mentioned. Several banks have made this error and thankfully it is becoming more rare as internal audits have identified and remedied the problem in many cases.
Our advice is (as per interview with Newstalk today) to write a short letter if you are coming off a fixed rate to your lender and ask ‘is a tracker available, if not then please point out the clause that indicates this and why’. This should at least ensure that your loan gets a diligent ‘once over’ by the lender who should be able to tell without doubt what the situation is once they go through your paperwork.
TV3 Morning Show - have property prices bottomed out?
We were really pleased to feature on TV3’s ‘Morning Show’ with Sybil and Martin (Brian was standing in for Martin) in a conversation about property prices and whether or not we have hit the bottom. Aoife Walsh from the Respond! Housing Agency was also there giving some great information and advice for borrowers in trouble.
TV3 Morning Show featureing Irish Mortgage Brokers and MyHome.ie
TV3 The Morning Show with Sybil and Martin from Irish Mortgage Brokers on Vimeo.
We were delighted to feature on TV3’s ‘Morning Show with Sybil and Martin’ on their monthly property slot alongside Angela Keegan from MyHome.ie
In the piece we discussed the property market as well as the financial side of it and how changes to both interest rates and taxation changes could affect buyers in the future.
Irish Debate - Mortgages with Karl Deeter
We were delighted to work with Irish Debate on doing a mortgage show, we have been big fans of theirs for a long time so it is especially nice to work with people you already admire. The clip is below, you can tune into Irish Debate at the URL above and follow them on Twitter for timely warning when a new show is coming up @IrishDebate
Concerns surrounding people coming off tracker rates
The Financial Regulator has voiced ‘concerns’ over the manner in which disclosure and transparency are enacted when people move from a tracker rate onto any other rate in a press release yesterday.
There were no firm figures given, and no direct accusations (although the Financial Services Ombudsman has received c. 60 complaints). The release comes on the back of a story in the Sunday Business Post by Emma Kennedy which outlined that PTsb ‘misclassified’ up to 300 mortgages and put them on standard variable rates rather than trackers. The issue was spotted by PTsb and rectified by them, customers have been refunded (on average €5,000) the difference they paid plus interest.
The way in which people ‘come off’ trackers tends to be by their own volition, if they opted for a fixed rate while on a tracker contract they do not need to be re-offered their tracker rate at the end. If they were on a fixed rate and are coming off it they are given a selection of rates and although the tracker was offered in the contract, a lender might put several other rates on the same page and give the client the choice of ticking a box to decide which one they’d like to proceed with.
The guidelines issued yesterday will direct banks to give indicative comparisons of the monthly costs of each rate that may be on offer as well as an outline of the implications of moving away from a tracker rate, as well as details outlining the advantages of a tracker rate.
One lender had given a ‘cooling off period’ to people wishing to change rate from a tracker and the Regulator has determined that this may be put into the updated Consumer Protection Code.
PTsb increase rates for the third time in a year
15:48 At 16:00 the press release about PTsb increasing rates will be released.
Had the company waited another week the headline ‘third time in a year’ would not have applied. It was this day last year that PTsb first increased rates on their variable clients by 0.5% or 50 basis points, it was a ground-breaking decision at the time, they were the first institution to do this and it opened the floodgates for every other bank to follow suit. PTsb were not in NAMA and they made their case, but it was rapidly criticised (in particular by Gerry Ryan who very decently gave the affected consumers a platform on his show).
The average mortgage balance in Ireland is €230,000 this time last year when the applicable rate was 2.69% the repayments would have been €1,053 per month on a 25 year mortgage. In the three rate hikes (totalling 1.5%, bringing the standard variable to 4.19%) the repayments will rise to €1,238 which will mean a total of €185 per month or €2,220 per year of additional cost to affected households.
If a person with the average mortgage was on the average industrial wage this has the same net effect as taking a €3,000 pay cut, which has arisen due to mortgage servicing costs.
This move will affect 38% of the banks customers which translates into 80,000 households, which represents a loan book of c. €5.3 billion. The 1.5% increase since last year should yield an additional €80,000,000 to the bank.
The EBS increased rates last week, and another has followed suit within days, showing that once again, banks are taking each others lead when it comes to jacking up the prices that consumers must pay. All of this money will disappear into the financial system and put further deflationary pressures upon the economy. We can expect no reaction from our Regulator and zero protection from further increases by other banks. At least Dick Turpin wore a mask.
EBS rate hikes, the benefit of mutuality?
EBS have announced a rate hike of 0.6% which is a follow on from their last 0.6% hike that was levied against variable rate mortgage holders on the 1st of May, this brings their margin increases to a total of 1.2% for the year to date.
Today’s Indo lead with this story (by Charlie Weston) and rightly pointed out that by the time this is over, a person with a €300,000 mortgage over 30 years could expect to pay just over €3,000 a year (after tax) in increased mortgage payments. For a person on the average industrial wage this is like a full months wages before tax being sucked away by the financial system. Tax hikes and wage cuts aside, this will ultimately reduce the money that is being spent in the economy and it will disappear into the financial system where banks will use it to de-lever further.
The contention for many people is that they are being punished, not for what they have done wrong, but for what they have done right, the people who will see their loan payments increase are those who have performing variable rate mortgages. The increases are threefold, firstly is to cover the cost of funding that EBS and other banks are facing, a large part of this is down to the institutional decisions that they made. Secondly you have the people in arrears who’s impairment costs are affecting the cost of funding to the institution as well as decreasing the operational income the bank can obtain. Lastly is to subsidize the tracker mortgage holders whom the banks mistakenly lent to at rates that are (as it turns out) not commercially viable.
What can people do? Very little, personally, if I was an EBS member I would withdraw all of my savings from them immediately, banks have two sides to the balance sheet, one is lending (assets) the other is deposits/funding (liabilities), and while reducing liability might be a good thing for most companies, in banking it doesn’t work that way, they need those deposits in order to fund loans. Removing deposits from a bank when they make a decision that adversely affects you is really the only thing a small person can do in response to the institution.
Economically we have a concern that rate hikes will ultimately prove to be a deflationary force on the Irish economy, and there is little that can be done to stop this, the Financial Regulator has made it clear from the past that they will not intervene on prices, the Department of Finance is taking the same approach. However, these rate hikes are taking away the same income that the state needs to survive on and will push many people into financial difficulty and out of the effective tax net. For the average worker €3,000 a year is almost 10% of their income, if there was a 10% of income addition to income taxes there would be a revolt, but not so when banks hit their customers, people are acting irrationally and we don’t understand why.
The banks set to follow (according to the article) are AIB, BOI, PTsb and INBS. We had predicted a 100 basis point increase in 2010 starting in Q1 by 50bps followed by a further 50bps later in the year with a final 50bps in 2011, this has proved to be quite a prescient prediction (and one we wish we could have been wrong about!), but it isn’t one that people have to be powerless about, do your talking by changing your mortgage to a different institution or moving your deposit, change your credit card provider (if it is via your bank) and switch your life and home insurance (where appropriate). Consumers are only able to be victimized to the extent that we allow banks to get away with it.
Marian Finucane Show: 26th June 2010 - featuring Irish Mortgage Brokers
We were delighted at the invitation to join the Marian Finucane show on RTE 1 last Saturday for the second time this year, we were asked to go on alongside Angela Keegan of MyHome.ie to talk about property prices, mortgage lending criteria and property tax.
The RealPlayer version is here
You can check out an MP3 of it here
Or go to RTE and go through the list of shows to find it here
If you were listening to the show and have any questions relating to it please feel free to call us or email your query. We hope you enjoyed the show and if not then listen back to it!
We hope to be on this show again soon and help to raise the debate of Property Tax again.