Archive for the 'Ups And Downs' Category

Write Down Our Debts Too Please!

Afternoon :)

I’ve just read an interesting article in my Moneyweek magazine by Simon Nixon in which he writes about the complete lack of contrition by the financial elite for the current mess that is the banking system.

I’ve expressed my own views on this before including the lack of penalties imposed but having got one of my credit card statements this morning and found that I’d inadvertently gone over my credit limit, I immediately put some money in to bring it down to the limit I agreed to.

Even though my finances are akin to a car running on petrol fumes the point is, I paid it because repaying my debts is what I signed up for when I borrowed the money in the first place.

I therefore began to wonder why the likes of you and I, who borrow with no intention to defraud or manipulate,  bother  trying to repay the few thousand we owe in comparision when there is no punishments for these bankers?

In addition, in the US, people can simply walk away from repaying the mortgage they can no longer afford  because the lending institutions don’t pursue them to repay, unlike over here.

The financial industry knowingly operated with so much smoke and mirrors that the ‘complicated financial packages’ they kept on selling turned out to be little more than cleverly wrapped gift boxes moving around in a game of pass the parcel with no one knowing when the music would  stop.

If you or I had tried to run a business in the same manner then we would probably have been done for fraud!

These bankers (substitue another word here if you wish) must have been incredibly confident, (or arrogant if you prefer) that their wheeling and dealing would never filter through to the wider markets but it has.

We didn’t cause the run on Norther Rock and we didn’t cause the collapse of Bear Stearns so, based on the billions of pounds that has been written off so far, what difference will paying off my few thousand make although you can bet your bottom dollar that we will not be let off the hook so readily.

Write down our debts too I say!!

Home Information Packs and Commonhold

Morning everyone :)

Just when you thought that HIPs were dead in the water, they raise their  heads again, with a recent article explaining how they’re going to work for leasehold flats.

Currently the only difference between a leasehold and a freehold HIP purchase is the inclusion of the lease but that is set to change.

Now I wonder how many of you out there have any idea how many questions should be asked ahead of purchasing a property of this type?

I also wonder how many of you know which questions should take ideally take priority over others?

The leasehold system is  complicated and for many leaseholders enormously stressful after the fact because it remains a poorly understood sector of the property market.

We are bombarded with TV programmes that show us how easy it is to buy a property and make money out of it, and for business ventures that’s all very well and good.

However, if you can only afford a flat as a home then there is no information provided to you at the beginning of your purchase unless you know what questions to ask and I’m not talking about the normally required legal documentation.

Information that could really help with an informed choice is not usually provided voluntarily by estate agents for fear of losing a sale.

Most leaseholders thought that they owned their home, (including us) and by the time realisation dawned that they were only glorified tenants with their ground landlord deciding how the block should be maintained (or not) and paid for (not by him but by you in the way of service charges) and that the managing agent was about as much use as a chocolate fireguard then it was too late.

They were the proud ’owners’ of a flat in a poorly managed, problematic block.

There is plenty of help available but you didn’t buy a leasehold flat with a view to having to need so much of it.

More importantly, how many of you know that we were actually given a third way of purchasing a property in the form of Commonhold?

This is a way of purchasing a flat but without having a third party, i.e. a freeholder, making  decisions on a property you will actually own, unlike leasehold which is controlled not by you, but by your landlord.

Not many of you I bet.

I now have an excellent managing agent that has taken me through the RTM process and whilst I have to pass a grateful nod toward the particular part of the legislation that made this route available, the securing of the agent only came about through a series of unplanned events.

In light of the fact that leasehold continues to grow, the role of the managing agent is key.

Feel free to comment or to ask questions if you would like.

I would be more than happy to hear from you.

In the meantime, Buyer Beware!

Have a great weekend.

Is It Me?

Hi :(

Is it just me or is anyone else finding it more and more annoying to read about all the financial institutes that are seeing their dodgy dealings come crashing down and are still getting massive pay outs, even when they are forced to resign?

I’m like many people who really try hard to honour all their financial committments but where’s my hand out when the s**t hits the fan through no fault of my own?

I’ve just spent three long, hard, unpaid years trying to sort out the major problems an absent landlord and a negligent managing agent caused this place, all by myself, and now, when I need to go back to work to earn some money to honour my committments, I develop hip bursitis which needs steroid injections and have had my first major panic attack!

Reward for failure has always been an issue for me but it seems to becoming more and more prevalent.

Massive hedge funds and investment banks create extremely complicated packages on the backs of mortgages that should never have been sold in the first place starting the credit cruch we are now experiencing and ultimately paying for.

I’m really tired of the attitude of so many people that really impact negatively on my own life - from being burgled, from my partner having our car (and nearly his motorbike) written off and the aforementioned landlord and agent.

Not to mention hidden stealth taxes and as usual, nothing in the budget for anyone who is self reliant and doesn’t have any kids.

Sorry to whinge but they do say that writing things down sometimes help.



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