Forget about the UK mortgage market for a moment and consider the Spanish mortgage situation, especially with Brits who have bought abroad and applied fora Spanish mortgage to do so. Well 3 years ago or so, this seemed sound economical advice. Every holiday home abroad programmer talked about how mortgages in Spain were much cheaper than in the UK and how they could get more for their money.
There was some truth in that at the time, you could get a Spanish mortgage for around 2.5% where the interest rates at home were somewhere around the 4.5% at the time. But this has backfired big style for those who took that option. Firstly the interest rates in Spain gradually caught up with those in the UK and continued to do so as they rose to 7% or so. The bad news is, Spanish mortgages have not reduced like they have here in the UK, with no government bail outs to the level we have with Bank Of England, so mortgages have doubled and more in only a few years. If that was not enough the drop in sterling has increased mortgages another 40% or so again, as Spanish mortgages have to be paid in Euros not the pound, 3 years ago you could almost get 1.5 Euros to the pound, now you are lucky if you can get 1.09 Euros to the pound.
The results are that many Brits are just handing their keys in and walking away, losing a considerable amount of money. The language difference and not having access to mortgage advice or even a lack of mortgage advisers means that many Brits do not know who to talk to or even if their are rescue packages out there. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out if 1 million Brits come home, there will be a huge drop in income in Spain and much of its infrastructure has relied on foreign investment.
Ironically some Brits may be in a better situation to sell their property than last year. The strong Euro may help them sell their Spanish home to a new owner from a country that deal in Euros, sell it cheaper than they bought it for, but because the Euro is so strong actually come away with more in Sterling than the house was bought for. For example 100 Euros is worth the same as 150 Euros was 3 years ago in sterling. So if you bought a house for 150,000 Euros, roughly £1000,000 sterling 3 years ago, you could sell that house now for around 110,000 Euros now to get the same back in sterling.
The issue here is we don’t here this on TV. We are sure many Brits are not aware of this and so the Brits could sell their home cheaper than any other European owner, pay off the mortgage and walk away in a better position than handing the keys in.
