Leekbrookgull
Well-known member
Please can someone explain exactly what they are and how they work.
The problem occurs when property prices fall. Sub prime customers have negative equity and are often unable to pay back the loan. Leaving the bank which made the loan in the shit.
Not just the bank that made the loan. To spread the risk, these loans are then packaged up and sold on to other banks, who don't know what they're buying until the sh!t hits the fan.
This is no time to be young.
Lenders will want to retain their good paying existing customers so I expect them to offer good clients a great new deal when their present rate ends something they have been lazy in doing in the past and retain their book.
'Clown' thanks for that,you kept it simple. However one question always leads to another ! How are mortages 'sold on' ? As a one off or in packages ? If so how is a package made up ?
After another five months, Uncle S notices that you've defaulted on another payment, and sells the loan on to Beach Hut. He makes a profit too, but a smaller one than me -- and Beach Hut is the next MUG to be landed with a loan which he doesn't yet know is really dodgy.
If the crisis in the banking sector spills over into the real economy (which it almost certainly will), this will affect the employment prospects (and income) of "prime" borrowers. Combined with higher interest rates all round, this will tip them into difficulty in repaying the mortgage.
This is no time to be young.
They are loans, secured against houses, that are offered to people whose credit rating is not particularly high.
Someone with a good income and a hefty deposit in the bank is a prime customer, and may get a mortgage with a competitive interest rate. A sub-prime customer may have a lower or less steady income, less capital, or other credit problems (such as a history of bad debt). They can have a mortgage, but normally have to pay a higher interest rate.
The problem occurs when property prices fall. Sub prime customers have negative equity and are often unable to pay back the loan. Leaving the bank which made the loan in the shit.
Hope this helps. I got D at economics A-level.
I'm young-ish and I'm attempting to offload the house I own at present, and stick the profit in the bank until this whole horrible affair blows over.
Is this such a wise move?
You will have fees to sell it, fees to re-buy when you are ready and rent to pay in the interim. I would sit tight if you can.
After this whole horrible affair there will be another waiting in the wings - its called life.