Uncle Spielberg
Well-known member
Who wrote that as you didn't!
Ray Bolger. Of course Darren I could not anything so clear and concise don't be silly.
Who wrote that as you didn't!
Well thats where you and I differ. Do you have a graph to prove this?
The period selected (not by me) is the period since the bubble started. Why would anybody select anything else. Nobody would have expected a bubble to last 160 years!
No, I cited a personal example in post #62, based on a FTB property in Worthing. I think that it has to be accepted that the ability to purchase a property will not be within the reach of everyone, it never has been, or towns like Crawley would never have been built.
Having said all that, if I had had to find a 25% deposit in 1980, which would have been equivalent to a years salary, then I would have been bolloxed. Banks now have cash, and lots of it, so should be offering 90% mortgages to FTB who can demonstrate their ability to afford it.
Regarding Banks with loads of dosh. Why would they return to the scenario that caused the last bubble and the collapse of the Worlds financial markets?
If they lend at 90% and house prices fall any more than 10%, every new lender would be in negative equity. Is that a good situation?
Exactly. When I got my mortgage, to get the best rate I could I had to put down a 25% deposit. In affordability terms, I'm quite lucky in that I could have had a 200% mortgage at least, and still been able to afford it comfortably now and in the future.I said "so should be offering 90% mortgages to FTB who can demonstrate their ability to afford it". The crunch was caused by the Sub-Prime market where 120% mortgages were given to people who clearly couldn't afford it, and ended up being repossessed. Quite a difference
Exactly. When I got my mortgage, to get the best rate I could I had to put down a 25% deposit. In affordability terms, I'm quite lucky in that I could have had a 200% mortgage at least, and still been able to afford it comfortably now and in the future.
But I had to put down a sizeable chuck as a deposit to get the lowest rate available, but if I got a 90% mortgage, I would have had to pay a hefty whack each month on top of what I am paying now, but affordability wise, it would not have made no difference to me.
I think rates should reflect more on what the borrow can afford to pay, more than how much of a deposit they can put down.
The problem with the old 100-120% mortgages, is people where lieing about teir incomes to get the large loans. Fraud in my book. I would love to see people that did it, as well as brokers or advisors that encourged it, brought up on charges if they default on their mortgages.
Its those people that have helped towards putting the market where it is today, and at the moment if they went for a fixed tracker, they have had it off!!For the moment!
The credit crunch and recession was not and never has been down to mortgage lending in the UK.
The problem with the old 100-120% mortgages, is people where lieing about teir incomes to get the large loans. Fraud in my book. I would love to see people that did it, as well as brokers or advisors that encourged it, brought up on charges if they default on their mortgages.
Not true.
It is true - The broker may not have directly encouraged it but many also glossed over detail they must have known was not strictly correct.
Some brokers knew which self certs would be checked and what wouldn't or what the chances were that only 1 in a hundred would be checked.
When I got my self cert I was staggered at how easy it was. I knew I could afford it and it got me out of a hole but it was easy to see how the system could be abused.
Of course its not the whole reason, but it's part of the reason.I am sorry but are you a mortgage advisor ?. You are peddling a lot of mistruths. You COULD NOT ever get a 100-125% mortgage on self cert, income had to be proved and verified. Self certs were limited to 90% at the highest. Also do you know how many repossessions have occured for the people who took out the 100% plus mortgages ?. Not very many at all.
The credit crunch and recession was not and never has been down to mortgage lending in the UK.
Why?The problem with the old 100-120% mortgages, is people where lieing about teir incomes to get the large loans. Fraud in my book. I would love to see people that did it, as well as brokers or advisors that encourged it, brought up on charges if they default on their mortgages.
Not true.
Did you declare your actual income ?.
Why?
So writing down that you earn 100k a year for example when you only earn 30k a year to obtain a loan is not fraud? What is it then?
Not really, its a long story but basically I was getting divorced and needed to borrow a lump to buy the ex out. My income had dropped due to the divorce.
House prices had fallen - I guessed it was only a minor slump and gambled that way. Luckily I guessed right and the following year I made up the difference by working hard and because my house went up in value.
I did another self cert and borrowed an extra £60k and stuck it away @ 7.64% for three years and £30k premium bonds. I've paid most of the mortgage off now and still have most of what I borrowed as extra left.
It was luck, judgement and getting the timing right that paid off but it was close and I wouldn't recommend trying it if you have a lot to lose family wise, but as I had just got divorced and lost £150k I was determined to make it work.