Unfair Mortgage Charges Refunds - Jan 2010
Hundreds of thousands of home owners could be in line to collect hefty refunds for unfair mortgage charges.
The crackdown by watchdog the Financial Services Authority is likely to lead to claims by hundreds of thousands of home owners who believe they have been harshly penalised.
Terry Balfour, of insolvency specialist IVA.com, said: "It's good to see the financial watchdog stepping in on the side of the thousands of borrowers in arrears with their mortgage.
"Banks and other mortgage lenders all too often impose punitive charges when their customers get into trouble with repayments.
"It is understandable that a modest fee for additional administration may be imposed, but piling substantial penalties on to households which are clearly struggling is unnecessary and will only serve to further line the bulging coffers of many lenders.
"When people are in trouble with their mortgage they need help and advice and a bit of a breathing space – not to be hounded for even more money which they cannot repay."
The FSA fined lender Gmac-RFC for how it treated customers between October 2004 and November 2008.
The fine was partly due to the £45 a month levied on borrowers who went into arrears.
The watchdog said this was "excessive" and did not reflect administration costs.
However as many as 30 lenders – including Bradford & Bingley, the Derbyshire and Cheshire Building Societies and specialist lenders like Kensington and Morgan Stanley – have a similar charging structure.
According to the Council of Mortgage Lenders 195,000 borrowers are currently in arrears and this figure is expected to rise to 205,000 this year.
High street banks, particularly those in receipt of government bailout funds, have been forced to adopt a more tolerant approach to struggling borrowers. But many non-mainstream lenders like Gmac-RFC outsource the administration of their loan books to companies that are not so sympathetic.
Outsourcing firm Homeloan Management (HML), part of the Skipton group, processes loans for more than 400,000 other borrowers, including customers of the Derbyshire and Cheshire Building Societies.
Although HML refuses to publish statistics on arrears, a similar pool of 400,000 loans from Gmac-RFC shows that 20 per cent of borrowers are behind with payments.
This suggests that as many as 80,000 customers with loans processed by HML are being charged a monthly fee that the FSA deems unfair.
An industry insider said: "It's a question of when, not if, this will apply to other lenders.
"It is causing a mighty problem as lenders and HML do not have the staff to look at individuals on a case-by-case basis."
The FSA is set to release a report later this week and five more mortgage lenders are in line for fines.
Cerris Tavinor, an FSA spokeswoman, said: "We completed our investigation into Gmac and published the results of that case.
"We have made the point publicly that we have referred other lenders to enforcement, so other work is carrying on."
Neil Warman, the chief commercial and finance officer at HML, said: "We are not able to comment on specific client circumstances but we work closely with a number of lenders, managing their customer mortgage accounts in line with their lending and administration policies.
"In the event of one of our clients wanting to make a retrospective adjustment to the mortgage accounts we manage for them, then we would work with them to help this to take place effectively.
Source: Daily Express 25th January 2010
« Return to full news listings
Links to External Websites
We may provide links to external websites via our own website. EMCAS is not responsible for the content of any external websites. Any external links that we may use to other websites are purely provided for the convenience of the user.
The inclusion of any link to an external website from our website should not be understood to be an endorsement of that website, the site's owners, their products/services or the views or information provided by that website.
We cannot guarantee that the external links provided will work all of the time nor do we have any control over the availability of any linked pages.
We also provide Debt Solutions
-
Millions of pension dreams shattered - Nov 2011
Nearly three million savers with personal pensions designed to protect them from stock market turmoil have been left up to 45?per cent worse off than people who retired five years ago.
Read More -
FOS raises concerns over whole of life policies - Oct 2011
The Financial Ombudsman Service has raised concerns about the levels of complaints it is receiving about reviewable whole of life policies.
Read More -
Official data shames Barclays as worst bank for complaints - 09/11
Barclays clocked up the most complaints of any UK bank in the first half of 2011 at an astonishing rate of one every minute.
Read More
