Business ETC uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Click here to find out more »
Dublin: 12 °C Sunday 26 May, 2013

Mortgage arrears continue to increase, says BOI

Bank report for first quarter of 2012 says that residential property prices don’t appear to have “fully stabilised”.

Image: Images_of_Money via Creative Commons

BANK OF IRELAND says that trading conditions “remain challenging” but expects Irish exports to “continue to enjoy growth”, according to its latest interim management statement.

However, the bank says that despite some positive signs for Irish competitiveness and consumer confidence, “domestic economic indicators remain weak, unemployment remains elevated, and residential property prices do not appear, as yet, to have fully stabilised.”

It notes that arrears in its residential mortgage book continue to increase, but says it is engaged with customers who are in difficulty and seeking loan restructures.

“Given the continued difficult conditions in the Irish economy,” it adds, “our Irish business customers who have a high dependency on the domestic economy continue to face challenges.”

It says that customer deposits are “broadly in line” with December 2011 figures at €70 billion, and its loan to deposit ratio is down to 142 per cent (from the 144 per cent of 31 December 2011). Loans and advances to customers are down 3 per cent to €99 billion since the start of the year.

BOI says it began reducing its deposit prices early in 2012 and will continue to re-price lending portfolios “where appropriate”, such as the variable rate increase to customers in the UK.

There are also heightened concerns over the performance of other eurozone economies and the bank’s “operating income and net interest margin continue to be adversely impacted by the cost of funding”.

However, it is making anticipated cost savings and its operating costs “remain under strict control”.

BOI is holding its AGM today.

Earlier: Bank of Ireland received €264million in applications for mortgage fund >

There is ‘no silver bullet’ to address mortgage arrears, says financial regulator >

Read next:

Comments (19 Comments)

  • Tell your friends in power to stop taxing and adding bills into to households then! How can people survive when it just bills after bills after bills!! And wages are not going up, cost of living and petrol is more expensive than ever. Water, bin, gas, electricity, property tax, tv licence, mortgage protection, home insurance, management fees while no dental or health cover even though we pay massive taxes already on our wages, whats the point of having kids and buying a house in this poorly run country who thinks it should charge people prices as bad as beautiful places Paris or Munich etc, this little over priced hell hole has not even got a fast express system to the airport ffs it’s got a bus service!!! Embarrassing how expensive it is to live in this old run down little island. And the worst part is there are more taxes and charges in the way!

    Reply
  • I doubt very much we have seen the tip of the Iceberg yet. Discussions & comment seem generally to lean towards the mortgage crisis albeit most of it glossed over with the true facts rarely admitted by either the banks or government. I believe the true figure regarding mortgage arrears is twice if not three times as bad. It is impossible to see how the situation has improved given there is still enormous unemployment combined with the amount of new taxes, charges, levies etc landed on people in the past 14 months. Real income is also shrinking so is it any wonder the mortgage crisis is growing. More worrying and only making this crisis worse is the increasing personal debt crisis which is rarely highlighted. Astonishing polls recently claiming 1.6 million citizens have less than 100 euro left at the end of the month, with well over half with nothing left surely should wake up this government. Retail sales are collapsing (does it take a genius to work out why?), the most basic requirements of survival, namely Home heating oil, food, Petrol (if your lucky enough to have a job) have increased substantially. Amazingly a sneaky little low usage levy was introduced by the ESB recently and not a mention of it anywhere. In one breath we are encouraged to reduced carbon emissions and use less electricity, now we are to be penalized (only in Ireland I guess). Despair best sums up my impression of were this is all going. Europe too is beginning to crumble, Le French president getting the boot, Spain about to collapse, Dutch government resigning, time we start waking up and stop digging this European hole any larger.

    Reply
    • This is the first time since I bought my house in 2007 that I simply don’t have enough money in my account to pay my mortgage. I have a full time job I don’t live a lavish lifestyle by any means and I got rid of my digital tv service to cut down on costs. I have a 2 bed terrace house in D15 and have still yet to tile my bathroom. I just don’t care anymore they can have my house back if they want I’ll gladly rent it would be a huge relief am just sick of worrying.

      Reply
    • I hear you mate… First time in 28 years that my account was overdrawn.. All be it by 16 euro but I still got a warning letter, I stopped my health insurance couple of months ago, contemplating stopping my dogs insurance ( I know , I know but my dogs are importantly me) starting to sell my valuables, it is time to leave Europe , take the pain but at least we can make our own decisions, we are small enough to survive this but we have to be brave.

      Reply
    • I hear you too John, bought my own humble cottage in the midlands 11 years ago (could not afford to live in Dublin, home city), had to do substantial renovations, took out a top up mortgage. Whilst having a relatively low mortgage outstanding was made redundant and now stuck in the middle of waste land with the occasional tumble weed passing by. On interest only which is little help. With all these new charges and petrol prices off the scale, i can see myself having to absail to interviews. Approached my mortgage provider seeking to combine two mortgage payments into one with a slight increase in term, basically told to FO with the irony being if I borrowed the exact amount I owed over a 20 year period my repayments would be 200 euro less per month, Despite having one Mortgage but two payments due to the top up, i am landed with two MMP, indeed the top up which was half what I originally borrowed is costing me more in repayments, Go figure. Even if I wanted to sell or give my house away, I could not. Not sure how the recession apart from Mortgage payment challenges is affecting the Big City but I can tell you that the midlands is looking like wild west at the moment, not a sinner about, not a sign of life or hope generally, GRIM would be an apt description and I don’t live too far from that B$%^X Hogan! Its a pretty bad state of affairs when those still in employment can barely make ends meet.

      Reply
    • Right beside you John!
      I have no social life cos I can’t afford to go out! Bank account overdrawn at the end if the month the last few months! Bills sky rocketing despite lower usage and now contemplating selling my car even though I need it!
      Not just me that’s turning grey with stress and worry but my retired parents too who are wondering how the hell the country got like this!

      Reply
  • ”However, the bank says that despite some positive signs for Irish competitiveness and consumer confidence, “domestic economic indicators remain weak, unemployment remains elevated, and residential property prices do not appear, as yet, to have fully stabilised.”

    Domestic economic indicators remain weak?
    Unemployment remains elevated??
    Residential property prices do not appear, as yet, to have fully stabilised???

    Didn’t you know that this was going to happen after you destroyed our economy guys?

    Reply
    • ”Loans and advances to customers are down 3 per cent to €99 billion since the start of the year”???

      Does that included the billions of euros of loans, that the taxpayer took over from you in NAMA???

      Reply
  • jimbo 24/04/12 #

    Ten out of ten for observation

    Reply
  • Apparently May will be a great month for stability in the banking sector within Europe. So maybe something good like acceptance of responsibility in failure to regulate all banking within the eu might happen. You never know stranger things have happened.

    Reply
  • @John, I know exactly what your talking about your not alone.

    Reply
  • “Given the continued difficult conditions in the Irish economy,”??

    “broadly in line”??

    “remain under strict control”.??

    Any chance of making Goggin return some of his multi million euro salaries and pension pot in turn for conspiring to sentence 3 generations to debt slavery??
    http://www.independent.ie/national-news/goggin-will-pocket-less-than-2m-this-year-1638365.html

    Reply
  • ”BANK OF IRELAND says that trading conditions “remain challenging” but expects Irish exports to “continue to enjoy growth”, according to its latest interim management statement”.

    Yes
    Exports of home owners ”continue to enjoy growth” as their bank inflated mortgage payments ”remain challenging”

    Reply
  • I guess I am going to build up quite a red-thumb collection here, but how can those people still in full time jobs now not afford to pay their mortgages unless A) They took out loans responsibly which they could never really afford i.e. 50% of their take-home going on the mortgage, or B) They also took loans for new car, furniture, holidays etc. and other unnecessary things on top since getting their mortgage?

    Reply
  • they obviously have a lot of confidence in their own bank ……………. http://www.independent.ie/business/boi-bosses-move-29m-of-own-cash-out-of-bank-3053970.html

    Reply

Add New Comment