Tag Archives: Mortgage Arrears

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Gulp.

WhatGoesUp writes:

“Having failed to buy into the Michael Noonan hype that Irish banks were on the road to recovery, I decided to go off and look for myself at the numbers.What I found was not the picture as imagined by the Minister of Finance. What’s more, in reality, the picture is actually worse than presented here:- The mortgage arrears figures are only for Primary Dwelling Homes (PDH i.e. family homes) – no Buy-To-Let (BTL) numbers are included, which are even worse.This is without looking at the SME lending/arrears disaster in the banks…”

Sources: Irish Banking federation, Central Bank

mortgage

WhatGoesUp writes:

Matt Philips – a writer for Quartz – wrote an article last year headlined: “Welcome to Ireland, where mortgage payments are apparently optional” Well – 12 months later and he’s tweeted:

Finance[RTÉ’s business editor David Murphy on last night’s Six One news]

The Department of Finance’s latest figures on mortgage arrears for Ireland’s six biggest lenders involve some 80,000 mortgage holders who are three months behind with their loans.

While 77% of owner-occupier mortgages in arrears had not been restructured by the end of September last, that figure only dropped to 75% by the end of November.

An improvement of 2%, or approximately 300, of mortgage accounts ‘under reconstruction’.

Meanwhile, the number of controversial ‘split mortgages’ almost doubled, from 2,500 in August 2013, to 5,800 in November.

(RTE)

90255305(A protest by members of the People for Economic Justice and the Defend Our Homes League on Kildare Street, Dublin last year)

Banks moved on over 50 Mayo property-owners who were before last week’s sitting of the County Registrar’s Court about difficulties relating to mortgages and other loans.
An unprecedented 56 cases – the majority of which were in the early stages of litigation involving Civil Bills for repossession – were processed by Mr Fintan Murphy, the County Registrar. This time last year there were only about two such cases before the same court.
One young couple with a small baby told the court that they were served with notice of the proceedings even though they were just tenants of a property …Another couple before the court explained that they would not be able to maintain their mortgage because their marriage had broken down.

 

Banks move on homeowners (Áine Ryan, Mayo News)

(Sasko Lazarov/Photocall Ireland)

9100841378_ab125eed5e_o[Zoomable version of the above graphic here]

You marvelled at “Mortgage Arrears In Space“.

Were a little confused by “Mortgage Arrears In Space 2

Now. The trilogy is complete.

What Goes Up writes:

The release today by the Central Bank of Ireland of mortgage arrears figures continues to defy the prediction by Michael Noonan that the economy could take off like a rocket:- unless of course he meant a Saturn ROCKET!!
On a related note – here’s a “Scary image of the day – how underwater are the mortgage books of the Irish banks?

9100773578_713b072c9e_o Gulp.

Like a rocket – a Saturn rocket! (Japlandic)

Irish banks – underwater and sinking fast (Japlandic)

00135821(Patrick Honohan, Governor of the Central Bank)

No change there then.

The moratorium on home repossession is to be slashed from 12 months to two months under a new banking code.
David Hall from the Irish Mortgage Holders Organisation said the changes to the code are “completely appalling”.
Mr Hall said: “It’s bank led and the Central Bank have serious questions to answer in relation to their consumer protection role in all of this.
“The only beneficiaries of this are the banks. The banks have persuaded the Central Bank that borrowers are sinners and that they must have power to deal with them.”

 

New banking code slashes moratorium on repossessions by 10 months (BreakingNews)

Thanks Leigh

(Laura Hutton/Photocall Ireland)

8800721354_2045cd1472_oWhat Goes Up writes:

The Central Bank released their Macro Financial Review 2013 yesterday: Their figures for restructured mortgage got a lot of attention, with respect to the number of temporary versus permanent solutions. Which is fine.. until you look at the figures for ‘not restructured’ mortgages (over 90 days in arrears)!

I See What You Did There (Japlandic)

Rising

Our problems are only starting, says Matt Phillips in today’s Atlantic.

He writes:

“Ireland’s homeowners are the European and perhaps the world champions in not repaying mortgages. The country’s national debt has increased fourfold in about as many years. Its banking system is being kept afloat by borrowing from Europe. And while a change in the law may soon force the banks to start cleaning up their balance sheets, nobody is quite sure how bad a mess they will find there when they do. Welcome to Ireland, where the hangover is in fact just beginning.”

Gulp.

On home repossessions, he adds:

“The simple answer is that Ireland is one of the hardest places in the world to drive a family from its home. Though thousands aren’t paying, repossessions of Irish homes remain “negligible relative to the level of arrears,” according to a recent report by Moody’s analysts.”

“The most recent update on repossessions from the Irish central bank shows that during the entire fourth quarter of 2012 only 38 houses were repossessed by court order. At a pace like that, it would take more than 620 years to get through the backlog of nearly 95,000 mortgage accounts that are at least 90 days behind on payments.”

On so-called moral hazard:

“Moody’s suggested that the increase was driven–at least in part–by some who are gaming the system. “The current dearth of repossessions and the recently proposed personal insolvency legislation is starting to result in higher defaults due to moral hazard,” the analysts wrote.

That’s financial-speak for “people think they can get away without paying their mortgage because they know they’re not going to lose their house.” Gregory Connor, a professor of finance at the National University of Ireland in Maynooth, estimates that about 35% of those who have fallen into arrears on their mortgages have done so “strategically.” That is, they can afford to pay, but just aren’t.”

On a loophole in Ireland’s foreclosure law:

“Ireland’s European lenders–the EU, the IMF and the ECB–know that the surge of bad mortgages is exposing them to increasing amounts of risk. And they don’t like it. In fact, in their latest report card on Ireland’s bailout program, they laid out steps the Irish government had to take to update the loophole in the 2009 foreclosure law, the one blamed for holding up foreclosures and repossessions. Those changes to the law are to be made “so as to remove unintended constraints on banks to realize the value of loan collateral.” In other words, the troika is telling Ireland to make it easier for banks to repossess and sell properties. Irish legislators are expected to pass a revamped law removing the loophole this summer.”

On why our debt could be worse than we think:

“And even if Irish banks do start dealing en masse with problem loans, it’s unclear how it could play out. On the one hand, it could mean more people in Ireland start to pay their mortgages, for fear of losing their homes. But a large wave of bank foreclosures could also “throw up evidence of under-reserving by banks as they start to close out some nonperforming mortgages,” according to a January report from Standard & Poor’s banking analysts.”

“In other words, it could reveal banks to be in worse financial shape than everyone thought. By extension, Irish taxpayers, the Irish government and its European rescuers would have to admit they face more risk than they knew. That would be a major embarrassment for both the Irish government, as well as its euro-zone sponsors, which have built up Ireland’s reputation as a debtor nation doing everything right.”

Dude.

It’s Monday Tuesday.

Welcome to Ireland, Where Mortgage Payments Are Optional and the Banks Are a Mess (The Atlantic)

Thanks Simon Judge