Wednesday, October 22, 2008

In Britain: "Repossessions must be a 'last resort'"

How Britain is dealing with foreclosures from The Times:

"Lenders will be encouraged to allow borrowers to take a repayment holiday of two or three months. Monthly repayments could also be lowered by extending the mortgage term or switching to an interest-only deal. The court also suggests struggling homeowners should be allowed to add mortgage arrears to their total loan..

When a case reaches court, lenders will be forced to explain what other avenues they have tried to resolve the problem."

So:

1) Let the borrowers stop paying for 2 or 3 months.

2) Lower the borrowers payments by:

A. Lengthening time of mortgage.

B. Paying interest only.

C. Add missed payments to loan total.

Here's one idea:

"The Government has also moved to bring companies running sale and rent-back schemes under regulation by the FSA. These schemes have come under fire for not offering homeowners the full value of their homes and evicting tenants after a short time"

Allowing borrowers to rent.

Britain is obviously doing more directly to stop this avalanche than the U.S., but they have not eliminated the problem.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

UK unemployment is rising sharply, reported by Reuters. More and more people are considering variations of equity release scheme to help them tap into their homes equity when their income disappears. The government is looking to regulate this market to more bad press.