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Bank of Ireland mortgage interest rate rise ‘fair’

Julia Rampen
Written By:
Julia Rampen
Posted:
Updated:
02/04/2013

The regulator has announced it has “no plans” to accuse Bank of Ireland of mis-selling despite increasing anger at rate hikes.

In March, Treasury Select Committee chairman Andrew Tyrie wrote to the Financial Services Authority criticising it for failing to raise concerns about the Bank of Ireland’s decision to increase some mortgage interest rates and not assessing the impact on the mortgage market.

However, in a letter seen by the Financial Times, former FSA managing director and Financial Conduct Authority chief executive Martin Wheatley responded: “We currently have no plans to treat this as a prima facie case of mis-selling.

“We have reviewed the terms and conditions provided to us by the Bank of Ireland UK and did not identify any concerns which led us to believe the terms may be unfair.”

The bank had announced earlier this year that 13,500 customers on tracker rate mortgages will have to pay more as it increases its rate.

A tracker rate is supposed to rise and fall in line with the Bank of England base rate, which has stayed at 0.5% since March 2009.

The bank says that it can do this as the small print on the contracts allows it to change the margin above which it tracks the base rate.

Last month a group of landlords announced they were preparing a class action against the bank on the basis that whilst there may be explicit terms in the mortgage document allowing the bank to increase the margin, this clause was inherently unfair.

The lawyer leading it, The Law Department founder Justin Selig, said Wheatley’s announcement made the class action more likely: “Every day I am getting probably about ten people contacting me which is building up to quite a large number.”


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