Re: General comment about mortgage arrears
Taxpayers are liable for £100bn secured only against the increasingly uncertain Northern Rock loan book - so whichever way you look at it, they got bailed out.
Have the shareholders lost? Yes, most of them have, but this Government allowed the possibility of compensation by undertaking to appoint an independent valuer. Taxpayers are also at risk from Northern Rock's two biggest shareholders. SRM Global and RAB Capital, who told Northern Rock's extraordinary shareholder meeting earlier this year that their legal advisers said the Government would break European Union human rights law if it took control of the bank for less than its true worth.
Northern Rock will not be able to survive without its taxpayer guarantee - and the Chancellor has extended the taxpayers' guarantee to virtually all Northern Rock's borrowings: retail deposits, wholesale deposits, unsecured borrowing, secured borrowing where the security actually turns out to be insufficient, collateralised and uncollaterised derivatives, onshore and offshore. Theoretically this excludes the £40-£50bn still borrowed through the offshore securitised Granite programme- but only so long as Granite can carry on rolling over its borrowings... which it will only do with that taxpayer backed Government guarantee.
Taxpayers are now formally guaranteeing a bank that remains fully owned by shareholders. We have the worst of both worlds- we bear all the downside but any upside goes elsewhere.
It really does not matter that you do not own a plasma TV or that you drive a cheap car, or how young you were when you bought your first house - if you cannot understand the simple premise that Northern Rock were bailed out then why do you keep arguing?
As for your other comments, there are a huge variety of ways that people can find themselves in debt and a great many of those people are not irresponsible at all. Circumstances change, employment status, marital status, illness, accidents, bereavements the list goes on.
Lenders relentlessly target those in trouble, offering solutions in the form of "consolidation" loans; they actively promote the flawed premise that you can borrow your way out of debt.
Sure, some borrowers are irresponsible, but the vast majority are simply trying to stay still in the ever-increasingly expensive mess that this country has become under our present Government.
Originally posted by argentarius
View Post
Taxpayers are liable for £100bn secured only against the increasingly uncertain Northern Rock loan book - so whichever way you look at it, they got bailed out.
Have the shareholders lost? Yes, most of them have, but this Government allowed the possibility of compensation by undertaking to appoint an independent valuer. Taxpayers are also at risk from Northern Rock's two biggest shareholders. SRM Global and RAB Capital, who told Northern Rock's extraordinary shareholder meeting earlier this year that their legal advisers said the Government would break European Union human rights law if it took control of the bank for less than its true worth.
Northern Rock will not be able to survive without its taxpayer guarantee - and the Chancellor has extended the taxpayers' guarantee to virtually all Northern Rock's borrowings: retail deposits, wholesale deposits, unsecured borrowing, secured borrowing where the security actually turns out to be insufficient, collateralised and uncollaterised derivatives, onshore and offshore. Theoretically this excludes the £40-£50bn still borrowed through the offshore securitised Granite programme- but only so long as Granite can carry on rolling over its borrowings... which it will only do with that taxpayer backed Government guarantee.
Taxpayers are now formally guaranteeing a bank that remains fully owned by shareholders. We have the worst of both worlds- we bear all the downside but any upside goes elsewhere.
It really does not matter that you do not own a plasma TV or that you drive a cheap car, or how young you were when you bought your first house - if you cannot understand the simple premise that Northern Rock were bailed out then why do you keep arguing?
As for your other comments, there are a huge variety of ways that people can find themselves in debt and a great many of those people are not irresponsible at all. Circumstances change, employment status, marital status, illness, accidents, bereavements the list goes on.
Lenders relentlessly target those in trouble, offering solutions in the form of "consolidation" loans; they actively promote the flawed premise that you can borrow your way out of debt.
Sure, some borrowers are irresponsible, but the vast majority are simply trying to stay still in the ever-increasingly expensive mess that this country has become under our present Government.
Comment