Media Coverage
- Solution Needed - Nov 16th
- Drawdowns to Drop - Nov 15th
- Rental Taxing Problem - Nov 15th
- Property Questions - Nov 6th
- Switching Mortgage Option - Oct 30th
- Better Home-Loans - Oct 15th
- Lifestyle Mortgages - Oct 15th
- Overhaul Your Mortgage - Oct 11th
- Calls for Creativity - Sep 29th
- Mortgage Malfunction - Sep 27th
- Mortgage Lockdown - Sept 20th
- Benefit from Price War - Aug 24th
- Boom-era mortgage products - Aug 16th
- Loyalty Doesn´t Pay - Aug 2nd
- Brokers predict €4.7bn - July 2nd
- Beware of Banks - June 23rd
- Draw up battle plan - June 21st
- Long hard look - June 19th
- ´Glitzy´ Bank Offers - June 09th
- Applicants beware - June 09th
- Buyers taken in - June 09th
- Moving back home - June 09th
- Escape route - June 07th
- Mortgage approvals up - May 29th
- Stop repossession cases - May 13th
- Buy your dream home - Apr 26th
- Market needs competition - Apr 23rd
- Too old for a mortgage - Apr 22nd
- Dubliners hammered - Apr 19th
- Government grants - Apr 17th
- Business & Leadership - Nov 14th
- Business World - Nov 13th
- Key to Best Mortgage - Nov 13th
- Deposits too High - Nov 12th
- Lack of Knowledge - Nov 12th
- Mortgage Insurance - Nov 5th
- Mortgage Ready? - Aug 10th
- On the Move - July 6th
- Government Scheme - May 18th
- Mortgage Reduction - May 11th
- BOI Pay Stamp Duty - April 03rd
- Change in tack - Mar 28th
- Approvals Up 33% - Mar 28th
- Rent of Buy - Feb 16th
- Lack of houses - Feb 06th
- Lenders Cautious - Jan 19th
- Look Before you leap - Jan 19th
- Current Accounts - Jan 19th
- Use your lump - Jan 12th
- €10 Billion Target - Jan 07th
- Market Short - Jan 07th
- Borrowing Average - Jan 07th
- New House Rules - Dec 22nd
- Market Shift - Aug 04th
- Buyers Back - Aug 04th
- Mortgages Deals - June 16th
- Ban Split Mortgages - June 12th
- Split Mortgages - June 11th
- Call for ban - June 11th
- Worrying Slump - May 21st
- Borrowers Sinking? - May 12th
- Harder then Ever - May 9th
- Signs of Competition - May 7th
- Insolvency Plan? - Apr 15th
- Personal Insolvency - Apr 14th
- Stressed Borrowers - Jan 10th
- Labour Warning - Mar 10th
- Mortgage Surge - Jan 10th
- Lenders Returning - Dec 15th
- Buy To Let - Dec 3rd
- Approvals Rise - Nov 30th
- AEMA Comments - Nov 29th
- Relief Panic - Nov 27th
Mortgage groups call on banks to stop repossession cases
Experts welcome overhaul of insolvency system to stop ‘torture of financial distress’
There has been a broadly positive response to the Government’s announcement of a major overhaul of the State’s insolvency system. However there is disappointment in some quarters that shortening the bankruptcy period from three years to one has been put on the long finger.
Lenders have been urged to immediately halt all home repossession cases pending ahead of legislative changes which will be required before the Government’s plans can be implemented.
Lenders should “cease repossession proceedings or adjourn those before the courts until the legislative requirements and systems from today’s mortgage support measures are implemented”, said David Hall of the Irish Mortgage Holders Organisation. The organisation has been to the fore in calling for a radical reassessment of the insolvency regime in the Republic.
There appears to be substance to the changes announced by the Minister for Finance Michael Noonan said the chief executive of the Irish Brokers Association Ciaran Phelan. He said “some of the elements are still without teeth and the practicalities of the process have yet to be ironed out”.
He said the insolvency changes came not “a moment too soon” and he hopes they “will have some positive impact on the mortgage arrears problem in Ireland”.
Mr Phelan said the area which deserved attention was the proposed involvement of the Stepchange charity which was not outlined at today’s Cabinet meeting.
“In essence, they will be funded by the banks through the mechanism of the IBF which may muddy the waters a little when it comes to the perception of impartiality. It stands to reason that banks will probably favour mortgage customers going through the Stepchange route rather than elsewhere – but caution has to be exercised around this – it has to be in the interests of both the mortgage holder and the bank to do so.”
However he said that irrespective of whether or not there would be a bank-funded charity involved in the process “it should be remembered that Ireland already has a debt advice agency in the form of Mabs which has helped thousands of people through their financial struggles”.
He said the new measures would increase the importance of the personal insolvency practitioners because banks will no longer have a complete veto on deals and the courts will have a role in resolving some cases so it “will be up to the PIP to present and communicate their client’s case effectively with the judiciary”.
Trevor Grant, of the Association of Expert Mortgage Advisors, welcomes the announcement: “Any steps to remove the torture of long-term financial distress are urgently required.”
However, he said “the lack of a reduction in the bankruptcy terms is disappointing. The proof of the pudding will be in the eating. There are far too many borrowers in distress and without any way out because of the inaction of certain lenders who are not helping themselves by adopting an inflexible attitude.”
Conor Pope - Irish Times


