Sprinkler Systems Uhaul move Lawn care Roses and trees Ford Parts Chrysler Parts Lake Powell New IPod Touch Apps New IPhone Apps IPhone Apps IPad Information IPad Apps Android APPS Android Games APPS Android Systems Android Tablets APPS and Beyond Smartphone Apps Smartphone Games Apps Repair and Tools Tablet PC Car Sharing Car Leasing Tabler Pc Fly Fishing Toyota Cars Vacation Rentals Stock market NYSE SSE Stock Freight & Shipping News Gluten Lactose Gout My Coupon Life Campgrounds Check Outdoor Kitchen Design and Redoo Bath Remodeling Palm Springs Las Vegas Vacation Tipps Lake Powell Boating Homes for lease
Finances / Finanzen » uk.finance » Offset mortgage - win-win
Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353614] So, 05 Februar 2006 21:18
reply  
i recently started offset mortgage with 1st direct (only pay interest on the
difference between what you borrow and what you have saved)

+ they paid me £25 to open a current account with them - i opened 3 accounts
(£75)

+ they paid me another £25 to have our salary paid into them (+£50) and
organised the transfer of any d/debits, etc

+ get a text msg statment each week (we got one per year from Alliance)

+ their morgage rate is 5.5% compared to near 7% charged by Alliance (who
used to stitch me up)

+ they knocked 1% off mortgage rate for 1st 3 months

+ i can offset as many accounts as i like & so i shifted every single penny
of our savings into 1st direct and offset it

+ even an i.s.a. cant earn interest at the rate we are borrowing so i'm
gaining near 2% per annum there

+ not taxed on interest on savings (since they now dont earn interest at
all)

+ interest is calcualted daily so can even benefit from fluctuating salary
account

+ can pay back the mortgage however (solong as it's paid by the agreed term)

+ can borrow back any money i pay off the mortgage directly in an emergency

+ can have any additional loans [at] same rate as the mortgage


question: excluding special interest rates - how can any other type mortgage
still exist in this light ??????????????????

and no i dont work for 1st direct
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353616 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 21:35
Tumbleweed  
"JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
news:u4tFf.40139$0N1.39991 [at] newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
>i recently started offset mortgage with 1st direct (only pay interest on
>the
> difference between what you borrow and what you have saved)
> <snip>

Didnt you post all this a week ago?

--
Tumbleweed

email replies not necessary but to contact use;
tumbleweednews at hotmail dot com
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353617 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 21:45
reply  
nope - haven't been posting here for a week


"Tumbleweed" <thisaccountneverread [at] yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:44n5q1F30dqsU1 [at] individual.net...
>
> "JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
> news:u4tFf.40139$0N1.39991 [at] newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
> >i recently started offset mortgage with 1st direct (only pay interest on
> >the
> > difference between what you borrow and what you have saved)
> > <snip>
>
> Didnt you post all this a week ago?
>
> --
> Tumbleweed
>
> email replies not necessary but to contact use;
> tumbleweednews at hotmail dot com
>
>
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353618 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 21:54
Andy Pandy  
"JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
news:u4tFf.40139$0N1.39991 [at] newsfe5-win.ntli.net...
> i recently started offset mortgage with 1st direct (only pay interest on the
> difference between what you borrow and what you have saved)
>
> + they paid me £25 to open a current account with them - i opened 3 accounts
> (£75)
>
> + they paid me another £25 to have our salary paid into them (+£50) and
> organised the transfer of any d/debits, etc
>
> + get a text msg statment each week (we got one per year from Alliance)
>
> + their morgage rate is 5.5% compared to near 7% charged by Alliance (who
> used to stitch me up)
>
> + they knocked 1% off mortgage rate for 1st 3 months
>
> + i can offset as many accounts as i like & so i shifted every single penny
> of our savings into 1st direct and offset it
>
> + even an i.s.a. cant earn interest at the rate we are borrowing so i'm
> gaining near 2% per annum there
>
> + not taxed on interest on savings (since they now dont earn interest at
> all)
>
> + interest is calcualted daily so can even benefit from fluctuating salary
> account
>
> + can pay back the mortgage however (solong as it's paid by the agreed term)
>
> + can borrow back any money i pay off the mortgage directly in an emergency
>
> + can have any additional loans [at] same rate as the mortgage
>
>
> question: excluding special interest rates - how can any other type mortgage
> still exist in this light ??????????????????

Because other mortgages have better rates?

Eg Nationwide are doing a lifetime fix at BOE base rate + 0.39% (4.89% currently).
It's flexible enough for most people to use as a saving account - you can make
overpayments (although limited to £500 per month in the first 5 years) and withdraw
them whenever you want.

You don't get to offset your current account, but the benefit in doing that is nearly
always trivial compared to the mortgage rate.

--
Andy
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353624 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 22:36
Clifford Frisby  
JethroUK© wrote:
> i recently started offset mortgage with 1st direct (only pay interest on the
> difference between what you borrow and what you have saved)
>
<snip>
> + their morgage rate is 5.5% compared to near 7% charged by Alliance (who
> used to stitch me up)
>
<snip>
>
> + even an i.s.a. cant earn interest at the rate we are borrowing so i'm
> gaining near 2% per annum there
>

Yep, it's a shame that Alliance don't do an offset, 'cos then you could
move back and be gaining 3.5% per annum with them.
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353627 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 23:37
Ronald Raygun  
JethroUK© wrote:

> question: excluding special interest rates - how can any other type
> mortgage still exist in this light ??????????????????

Question: Apart from that you die when you hit the bottom, is
there any disadvantage to jumping off a cliff?
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353632 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 23:57
reply  
"Ronald Raygun" <no.spam [at] localhost.localdomain> wrote in message
news:T6vFf.15384$wl.1672 [at] text.news.blueyonder.co.uk...
> JethroUK© wrote:
>
> > question: excluding special interest rates - how can any other type
> > mortgage still exist in this light ??????????????????
>
> Question: Apart from that you die when you hit the bottom, is
> there any disadvantage to jumping off a cliff?
>

of course the interest rate is key - and that's what attracted me to the
mortgage in the 1st instance

what i meant was that the vast majority of mortgages have 'similar' interest
rates (that's the law of the market place) - so how can they continue to
exist against the overwhelming benefits of off-setting - i dont see how they
can possibly continue for much longer except in the shadow of the same
ignorance of which i was guilty
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353633 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 23:54
jim  
On Sun, 05 Feb 2006 22:37:39 GMT, Ronald Raygun
<no.spam [at] localhost.localdomain> wrote:

>JethroUK© wrote:
>
>> question: excluding special interest rates - how can any other type
>> mortgage still exist in this light ??????????????????
>
>Question: Apart from that you die when you hit the bottom, is
>there any disadvantage to jumping off a cliff?

Sure, it messes up your hair.

Jim.
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353636 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 23:57
Andy Pandy  
"JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
news:jqvFf.11996$K42.7335 [at] newsfe7-win.ntli.net...
> of course the interest rate is key - and that's what attracted me to the
> mortgage in the 1st instance
>
> what i meant was that the vast majority of mortgages have 'similar' interest
> rates (that's the law of the market place)

Over 0.5% difference between FD and Nationwide. That's usually easily enough to beat
any offsetting advantage.

- so how can they continue to
> exist against the overwhelming benefits of off-setting

They aren't overwhelming, they are trivial. Provided you don't have vast amounts in
savings - if you do you should pay down your mortgage with them, if the mortgage is
flexible you can withdraw them if you need them.

- i dont see how they
> can possibly continue for much longer except in the shadow of the same
> ignorance of which i was guilty

Here's a challenge - work out whether you'd be better or worse off with the
Nationwide mortgage and a normal current account.

--
Andy
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #353637 ] So, 05 Februar 2006 23:57
Ronald Raygun  
JethroUK© wrote:

> "Ronald Raygun" <no.spam [at] localhost.localdomain> wrote
>> JethroUK© wrote:
>>
>> > question: excluding special interest rates - how can any other type
>> > mortgage still exist in this light ??????????????????
>>
>> Question: Apart from that you die when you hit the bottom, is
>> there any disadvantage to jumping off a cliff?
>
> of course the interest rate is key - and that's what attracted me to the
> mortgage in the 1st instance
>
> what i meant was that the vast majority of mortgages have 'similar'
> interest rates (that's the law of the market place) - so how can they
> continue to exist against the overwhelming benefits of off-setting - i
> dont see how they can possibly continue for much longer except in the
> shadow of the same ignorance of which i was guilty

It seems to me you are still guilty of the same ignorance.
You quote a rate of 5.5% which is not too bad, admittedly, but
hardly particularly brilliant. You are blinkered by your previous
lender's rate of 7% but that was just outrageous and is not a fair
basis for comparison.

Generally BTL rates are of the order of a whole % dearer than
residential ones, and I'm paying 5.99% on a BTL *with* the flexibility
to overpay and reborrow. Therefore you ought to be able to find a
non-BTL flexible lender for below 5%. That would then mean that
you're paying 10% too much, for the pretty pointless benefit which
offsetting offers over and above basic flexibility.
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #356531 ] Mo, 06 Februar 2006 13:30
Tim  
> > "JethroUK©" wrote
> > > <snip>
> >
> "Tumbleweed" wrote
> > Didnt you post all this a week ago?
>
"JethroUK©" wrote
> nope ...

I wonder who that was who made two posts using
your ID on 2 February then (3 days ago), especially
the one at 10:07pm talking about FirstDirect offsets?!
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #356535 ] Mo, 06 Februar 2006 13:51
Ronald Raygun  
Tim wrote:

>> > "JethroUK©" wrote
>> > > <snip>
>> >
>> "Tumbleweed" wrote
>> > Didnt you post all this a week ago?
>>
> "JethroUK©" wrote
>> nope ...
>
> I wonder who that was who made two posts using
> your ID on 2 February then (3 days ago), especially
> the one at 10:07pm talking about FirstDirect offsets?!

The three day week? I remember that.
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #380092 ] Fr, 14 April 2006 18:29
reply  
"Andy Pandy" <spam8times [at] wonderful.spam.invalid> wrote in message
news:44nfaeF3267tU1 [at] individual.net...
>
> "JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
> news:jqvFf.11996$K42.7335 [at] newsfe7-win.ntli.net...
> > of course the interest rate is key - and that's what attracted me to the
> > mortgage in the 1st instance
> >
> > what i meant was that the vast majority of mortgages have 'similar'
interest
> > rates (that's the law of the market place)
>
> Over 0.5% difference between FD and Nationwide. That's usually easily
enough to beat
> any offsetting advantage.
>
> - so how can they continue to
> > exist against the overwhelming benefits of off-setting
>
> They aren't overwhelming, they are trivial. Provided you don't have vast
amounts in
> savings - if you do you should pay down your mortgage with them, if the
mortgage is
> flexible you can withdraw them if you need them.
>
> - i dont see how they
> > can possibly continue for much longer except in the shadow of the same
> > ignorance of which i was guilty
>
> Here's a challenge - work out whether you'd be better or worse off with
the
> Nationwide mortgage and a normal current account.
>

here we are, only couple months into my offset mortgage, and without paying
one penny more in my monthly repayments i've already paid more than a grand
off my mortgage - dont know what Nationwide interest rates are on mortgage
or current account, but if you want to supply them i'll calculate the
difference - but i have a sneaky feeling it wont be in the same district
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #380099 ] Fr, 14 April 2006 20:29
Janet Stone  
"JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
news:M5Q%f.14608$zf1.14150 [at] newsfe5-gui.ntli.net...
>
> "Andy Pandy" <spam8times [at] wonderful.spam.invalid> wrote in message
> news:44nfaeF3267tU1 [at] individual.net...
>>
>> "JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
>> news:jqvFf.11996$K42.7335 [at] newsfe7-win.ntli.net...
>> > of course the interest rate is key - and that's what attracted me to
>> > the
>> > mortgage in the 1st instance
>> >
>> > what i meant was that the vast majority of mortgages have 'similar'
> interest
>> > rates (that's the law of the market place)
>>
>> Over 0.5% difference between FD and Nationwide. That's usually easily
> enough to beat
>> any offsetting advantage.
>>
>> - so how can they continue to
>> > exist against the overwhelming benefits of off-setting
>>
>> They aren't overwhelming, they are trivial. Provided you don't have vast
> amounts in
>> savings - if you do you should pay down your mortgage with them, if the
> mortgage is
>> flexible you can withdraw them if you need them.
>>
>> - i dont see how they
>> > can possibly continue for much longer except in the shadow of the same
>> > ignorance of which i was guilty
>>
>> Here's a challenge - work out whether you'd be better or worse off with
> the
>> Nationwide mortgage and a normal current account.
>>
>
> here we are, only couple months into my offset mortgage, and without
> paying
> one penny more in my monthly repayments i've already paid more than a
> grand
> off my mortgage - dont know what Nationwide interest rates are on mortgage
> or current account, but if you want to supply them i'll calculate the
> difference - but i have a sneaky feeling it wont be in the same district
>
>

LOL. In two months you have saved £1k off your mortgage. Please tell us
how you came to this calculation.
Re: Offset mortgage - win-win [message #380100 ] Fr, 14 April 2006 20:38
reply  
"Janet Stone" <jstone [at] nospam.com> wrote in message
news:fSR%f.56257$8Q3.46700 [at] fe1.news.blueyonder.co.uk...
>
> "JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
> news:M5Q%f.14608$zf1.14150 [at] newsfe5-gui.ntli.net...
> >
> > "Andy Pandy" <spam8times [at] wonderful.spam.invalid> wrote in message
> > news:44nfaeF3267tU1 [at] individual.net...
> >>
> >> "JethroUK©" <reply [at] the.board> wrote in message
> >> news:jqvFf.11996$K42.7335 [at] newsfe7-win.ntli.net...
> >> > of course the interest rate is key - and that's what attracted me to
> >> > the
> >> > mortgage in the 1st instance
> >> >
> >> > what i meant was that the vast majority of mortgages have 'similar'
> > interest
> >> > rates (that's the law of the market place)
> >>
> >> Over 0.5% difference between FD and Nationwide. That's usually easily
> > enough to beat
> >> any offsetting advantage.
> >>
> >> - so how can they continue to
> >> > exist against the overwhelming benefits of off-setting
> >>
> >> They aren't overwhelming, they are trivial. Provided you don't have
vast
> > amounts in
> >> savings - if you do you should pay down your mortgage with them, if the
> > mortgage is
> >> flexible you can withdraw them if you need them.
> >>
> >> - i dont see how they
> >> > can possibly continue for much longer except in the shadow of the
same
> >> > ignorance of which i was guilty
> >>
> >> Here's a challenge - work out whether you'd be better or worse off with
> > the
> >> Nationwide mortgage and a normal current account.
> >>
> >
> > here we are, only couple months into my offset mortgage, and without
> > paying
> > one penny more in my monthly repayments i've already paid more than a
> > grand
> > off my mortgage - dont know what Nationwide interest rates are on
mortgage
> > or current account, but if you want to supply them i'll calculate the
> > difference - but i have a sneaky feeling it wont be in the same district
> >
> >
>
> LOL. In two months you have saved £1k off your mortgage. Please tell us
> how you came to this calculation.
>

it's actually nearer 4 months when i took it out (i got the 2 months from
last time i posted) - i didn't calculate it at all (it's not an
estimation) - it's on my statement & it's actually more than £1k saved
Vorheriges Thema:Northern Rock hides a housing disaster
Nächstes Thema:Equifax selling email addresses to spammers
Gehe zu:
  


aktuelle Zeit: Sa Mai 19 02:25:16 CEST 2012

Insgesamt benötigte Zeit, um die Seite zu erzeugen: 0,59208 Sekunden
.:: Startseite - Hinweise - Impressum - Links ::.

Powered