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Non GAA Discussion => General discussion => Topic started by: Hardy on October 21, 2017, 08:04:06 PM

Title: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Hardy on October 21, 2017, 08:04:06 PM

Why is this not a criminal investigation?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: The Subbie on October 21, 2017, 08:47:10 PM
Quote from: Hardy on October 21, 2017, 08:04:06 PM

Why is this not a criminal investigation?
Because that's the way things are done in Ireland
White collar crime is a mere transgression
Working class crime of any description-TV licence, dog licence, etc - are horrendous heinous acts that must simply be made an example of.
Low hanging fruit to use a ridiculous management speak anology

The people who have their fingerprints all over the tracker mortgage scam won't see a day inside a courthouse let alone a cell, anyone remember Anglo?
A few of "the lads" had a little scholarship in Loughin house for 3or 4 months- garlic man got longer in Portlaoise.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 10:52:14 AM
Quote from: The Subbie on October 21, 2017, 08:47:10 PM
Quote from: Hardy on October 21, 2017, 08:04:06 PM

Why is this not a criminal investigation?
Because that's the way things are done in Ireland
White collar crime is a mere transgression
Working class crime of any description-TV licence, dog licence, etc - are horrendous heinous acts that must simply be made an example of.
Low hanging fruit to use a ridiculous management speak anology

The people who have their fingerprints all over the tracker mortgage scam won't see a day inside a courthouse let alone a cell, anyone remember Anglo?
A few of "the lads" had a little scholarship in Loughin house for 3or 4 months- garlic man got longer in Portlaoise.
Where is the 'Crime'
sounds to me like a load of people made bad decisions and the banks did what they were supposed to  , that is work in the banks best interest and maxmise profit?  some very hard luck stories but im failing to see any crime here.
im not impressed with the usual argument 'we bailed out the banks'  unless you want to keep bailing them out let them act as business'
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: The Subbie on October 23, 2017, 11:39:06 AM
So you want light touch regulation ? That worked out before for us didn't it......
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 12:15:43 PM
and the planned economy worked out great in eastern Europe at least capitalism had a built in recovery system where as communism collapsed
but  no what im  asking is  what crime was committed . the bank should operate within whatever laws are in force not what ever popular injustices that the newspapers discussions boards or politicians will be make them sound like they are on the side of the people .
had I tracker and gave it up I would consider that stupid by me unless things had turned out differently and trackers been a disaster . would people be then squealing for relief from them?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: johnneycool on October 23, 2017, 12:16:46 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 12:15:43 PM
and the planned economy worked out great in eastern Europe at least capitalism had a built in recovery system where as communism collapsed
but  no what im  asking is  what crime was committed . the bank should operate within whatever laws are in force not what ever popular injustices that the newspapers discussions boards or politicians will be make them sound like they are on the side of the people .
had I tracker and gave it up I would consider that stupid by me unless things had turned out differently and trackers been a disaster . would people be then squealing for relief from them?

What was that?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:25:32 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 12:15:43 PM
and the planned economy worked out great in eastern Europe at least capitalism had a built in recovery system where as communism collapsed
but  no what im  asking is  what crime was committed . the bank should operate within whatever laws are in force not what ever popular injustices that the newspapers discussions boards or politicians will be make them sound like they are on the side of the people .
had I tracker and gave it up I would consider that stupid by me unless things had turned out differently and trackers been a disaster . would people be then squealing for relief from them?
I'm open to correction here but at least some of the banks have admitted that what they did was wrong. That's be a fair indicator of wrongdoing, although perhaps not a crime.

As I understand it, and we need to bear in mind that each affected case is different, the affected mortgage holders were on trackers, they switched to a fixed rate for a specifically stated period of time, and when that time elapsed, the banks refused to put them back on the tracker that they had previously been on.

As I said, each case is different and the small print in each institution is likely be different.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: The Subbie on October 23, 2017, 12:29:40 PM
Quote from: johnneycool on October 23, 2017, 12:16:46 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 12:15:43 PM
and the planned economy worked out great in eastern Europe at least capitalism had a built in recovery system where as communism collapsed
but  no what im  asking is  what crime was committed . the bank should operate within whatever laws are in force not what ever popular injustices that the newspapers discussions boards or politicians will be make them sound like they are on the side of the people .
had I tracker and gave it up I would consider that stupid by me unless things had turned out differently and trackers been a disaster . would people be then squealing for relief from them?

What was that?

Yeah what is the recovery system ? Really keen to know?
Anyway I'm seeing lots of headlines about swift settlement and compensation payouts before Christmas.
Now maybe I'm reading this wrong but if you agree to pay compo aren't you in effect admitting guilt ? And if you admit guilt aren't you admitting that you have operated beyond the boundaries stipulated for your industry and in doing so you have adversely and materially negatively affected others.

Or just plain broke the law.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't. 
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 01:01:17 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
Yes, as far as I understand it.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: bennydorano on October 23, 2017, 01:14:15 PM
Quote from: johnneycool on October 23, 2017, 12:16:46 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 12:15:43 PM
and the planned economy worked out great in eastern Europe at least capitalism had a built in recovery system where as communism collapsed
but  no what im  asking is  what crime was committed . the bank should operate within whatever laws are in force not what ever popular injustices that the newspapers discussions boards or politicians will be make them sound like they are on the side of the people .
had I tracker and gave it up I would consider that stupid by me unless things had turned out differently and trackers been a disaster . would people be then squealing for relief from them?

What was that?
Central Government bailout.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 01:45:13 PM
Quote from: bennydorano on October 23, 2017, 01:14:15 PM
Quote from: johnneycool on October 23, 2017, 12:16:46 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 12:15:43 PM
and the planned economy worked out great in eastern Europe at least capitalism had a built in recovery system where as communism collapsed
but  no what im  asking is  what crime was committed . the bank should operate within whatever laws are in force not what ever popular injustices that the newspapers discussions boards or politicians will be make them sound like they are on the side of the people .
had I tracker and gave it up I would consider that stupid by me unless things had turned out differently and trackers been a disaster . would people be then squealing for relief from them?

What was that?
Central Government bailout.

Yeah. It's called socialism!
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Rossfan on October 23, 2017, 01:54:16 PM
What law have the bastards broken though?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Hardy on October 23, 2017, 02:04:28 PM
Quote from: Rossfan on October 23, 2017, 01:54:16 PM
What law have the b**tards broken though?

Theft is a crime, at least for ordinary people. Pilfering a person's assets to the tune of tens of thousands by deception, lying, fraud and breach of contract is a particularly odious form of theft.

Woodie Guthrie put it better:
As through this world I've wandered
I've seen all kinds of men;
Some will rob you with a six-gun,
And some with a fountain pen.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 02:19:59 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 01:01:17 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
Yes, as far as I understand it.

For the purposes of completeness here (and just for information, I'm not arguing with anyone), I've been (for commercial reasons) following the ECB rate since 2002 and at no point did commercial mortgage rates fall below the ECB plus margin rates being offered for commercial mortgages.  As I recall, the last time I changed my (domestic) mortage (2006), the rates I was offered were indistinguishable from the commercial rates being offered at the time. 
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 03:22:29 PM
Billy, I'm not sure what you're saying but I'd have thought, leaving compensation aside, that a calculation will be carried out that compares the interest charged on the affected loans with what would have been charged had the loan reverted to a tracker when the fixed period finished. The difference will be the amount due back to the borrower. There probably will have to be other adjustments too but I'd have thought that's the crux of it.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 04:09:53 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
either way the borrower made a choice maybe a bad one but their choice.
as for bad advice what the difference between that and a car sales man telling you that a Toyota is better than a Volkswagen or a Skoda, it still buyer beware .
my reading is that everyone knows they banks are a soft target  and any kind of pressure can be put on them and with all the stage booing and hissing and they're own vurnerable state cpuld very well make them five in .

f some one has written evidence that they would be allowed back on a tracker then they have a very good chance in a courtroom of getting compensation and should do that otherwise its just hearsay even then it would be a breach of contract rather than a Crime?

The Capitalist  recovery system was a bail of of the institution of the bank to the benefit of   Account holders Big and small   and the Bond holders. all the top guys got sacked (except for boucher who brought BOI back to profitability and repaid all GOV Monies) the shareholders got slaughtered, and cheques were honered and the bondholders kept issuing loans and the world went on after a few bumpy months/years
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 04:15:16 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 04:09:53 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
either way the borrower made a choice maybe a bad one but their choice.
as for bad advice what the difference between that and a car sales man telling you that a Toyota is better than a Volkswagen or a Skoda, it still buyer beware .
my reading is that everyone knows they banks are a soft target  and any kind of pressure can be put on them and with all the stage booing and hissing and they're own vurnerable state cpuld very well make them five in .

f some one has written evidence that they would be allowed back on a tracker then they have a very good chance in a courtroom of getting compensation and should do that otherwise its just hearsay even then it would be a breach of contract rather than a Crime?

The Capitalist  recovery system was a bail of of the institution of the bank to the benefit of   Account holders Big and small   and the Bond holders. all the top guys got sacked (except for boucher who brought BOI back to profitability and repaid all GOV Monies) the shareholders got slaughtered, and cheques were honered and the bondholders kept issuing loans and the world went on after a few bumpy months/years
It wasn't necessarily a bad move. If, for example, a borrower moved to a fixed rate that saved them money compared to the tracker rate for the period of the fixed term then surely that's a good move? Whether it was a good move or not is irrelevant though isn't it? Either they were entitled to go back to the tracker or they weren't.

It would appear that the banks, collectively, are admitting that thousands or their customers have been wronged. I'm not clear on detail but there seems to be little doubt from either side that refunds and compensation are due and will be paid.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Hardy on October 23, 2017, 06:22:42 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 04:09:53 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
either way the borrower made a choice maybe a bad one but their choice.
as for bad advice what the difference between that and a car sales man telling you that a Toyota is better than a Volkswagen or a Skoda, it still buyer beware .
my reading is that everyone knows they banks are a soft target  and any kind of pressure can be put on them and with all the stage booing and hissing and they're own vurnerable state cpuld very well make them five in .

f some one has written evidence that they would be allowed back on a tracker then they have a very good chance in a courtroom of getting compensation and should do that otherwise its just hearsay even then it would be a breach of contract rather than a Crime?

The Capitalist  recovery system was a bail of of the institution of the bank to the benefit of   Account holders Big and small   and the Bond holders. all the top guys got sacked (except for boucher who brought BOI back to profitability and repaid all GOV Monies) the shareholders got slaughtered, and cheques were honered and the bondholders kept issuing loans and the world went on after a few bumpy months/years

Even the banks themselves are not as enthusiastic in defence of their actions as yourself. In fact, they've stopped defending them, admitted that they were wrongful, agreed to refund the money embezzled and are considering the level of compensation that will be  offered. You don't compensate somebody for doing them good or for an action that is not wrongful.

"Wrongful" is simply a weasel word for "criminal" in this case, since, as I said in a previous post, obtaining money bywrongful means is theft.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Eamonnca1 on October 23, 2017, 11:57:01 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.

Where in the developed world has it failed? Has it failed in the developing world?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Eamonnca1 on October 24, 2017, 12:01:12 AM
Quote from: Rossfan on October 23, 2017, 01:54:16 PM
What law have the b**tards broken though?

The problem with scams like this is it's usually civil law rather than criminal law that they've broken. So somebody has to sue the blackguards at their own expense as opposed to calling the cops and letting them prosecute at the public expense.

Cormac O'hEadhra was talking about this the other day, he asked what'd be the point of imposing fines on the banks when the executives at the top wouldn't suffer any personal penalty and the added cost would just be passed on to the customers. The only solution I can see is for tougher laws on white collar crime to make this sort of thing a criminal offense so we can start doling out jail time to thieving bankers.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Declan on October 24, 2017, 09:06:50 AM

Fintan O'Toole: The corruption of Irish banking goes back 30 years

The betrayal of basic ethics goes so deep only the criminal law can root it out

We really should have a parade. It may not be quite up there with the centenaries of the Easter Rising or the Battle of the Somme, but surely the 30th anniversary of the corruption of the Irish banking system is worth marking. It is, after all, living history, a part of what we are. The word of the moment regarding Irish banking is "culture", but it is a euphemism for the systematic abandonment of basic ethics, of right and wrong. That started in 1987. In the previous year, the State had introduced deposit interest retention tax (Dirt) – as it went into force, the banks discovered that they could attract more deposits by allowing the local farmer and shopkeeper and doctor to sign a form claiming to be resident outside the country and therefore exempt from Dirt.

It was the most blatant of frauds – bank staff in rural towns had to pretend people they saw every day were not there at all, that they were really in Boston or Berlin or Birmingham. The lies had to be lived out as intimate, ordinary, mundane things. And they spread from the top: the great and the good of Irish life, the Jesuit boys who filled the boardrooms and the executive suites of the banks decided that these frauds were just business. They eyed each other and thought: "If we don't do this, the other crowd will." A rot set in and it has never been stopped.

Mark Hely-Hutchinson was chief executive of Bank of Ireland from 1983 to 1990. He was perhaps the last gentleman in Irish banking. He treated everyone who worked for him with dignity and respect. He could give a sincere Christian answer to the question of what he thought corporate government to be: "I think that very simply, that corporate governance includes behaving to your customers and to your staff and to the public the way you would like other people to deal with you." And if we want to understand the abysmal ethics of Irish banking, we might recall the fate of one of the great lost documents of modern Ireland: Mark Hely-Hutchinson's abortive code of conduct for bankers.

Hely-Hutchinson drew up the code shortly after he took over Bank of Ireland. It was an attempt at an ethical charter for the industry, an effort to ensure that if one bank behaved properly (by not opening bogus non-resident accounts, for example), its competitors would not undercut it. But crucially it also required the support of the Revenue Commissioners, the Department of Finance and the Central Bank. If a code of ethical conduct was going to work, these powerful State agencies had to give it serious backing.

Hely-Hutchinson had his first discussions about the code with the Revenue in 1983. As he later recalled before the Public Accounts Committee: "We produced a draft code of conduct for our own staff, discussed that further with the Revenue and with the Department of Finance and eventually we stated that we were going to do it, we were going to implement it unilaterally anyway, and we hoped that the Revenue would do something about making sure that other organisations followed suit."

"The Dirt scandal was the great alarm bell. But the State went back to sleep. It woke up in 2008 with an existential crisis generated by a banking system with no moral compass

But as far as pretty much everyone else was concerned, Hely-Hutchinson was a naive do-gooder. He got nowhere with the Revenue. When the Dirt fraud was being implemented through most of the banking system, he pressed the Revenue again about the code of ethical conduct. They told him "everybody had written them a nice cosy letter saying 'of course' but they hadn't got any means of policing the situation and they weren't very optimistic that it would actually happen; in other words, that other people would adopt the code of conduct." And the Central Bank? When Hely-Hutchinson pressed it about the code of conduct, "Oh, it would have been a very, sort of, warm polite response, 'What a pity these other people don't have the same ethics as you do.'"

This is not ancient history. We're still living with it. The Dirt scandal was the great alarm bell. In its report the PAC pointed to be the collective betrayal of the public interest and of basic ethical values by the boards of the banks: "Given the eminence of many of the members of the boards... it is surprising that they did not bring a greater weight to bear on the enforcing of ethical standards either within their organisations or the banking sector generally." But when this alarm went off, the State threw the clock at the wall, turned over and went back to sleep. It woke up in 2008 with an existential crisis generated by a banking system that had no moral compass, that knew no boundaries.

And we'll do this again and again – frauds followed by vague wailing about "culture", followed by more frauds. The only culture that really matters is the culture of impunity. When a system has no ethics, when it does not know right from wrong, it has to be educated. There might have been a time when a code of ethics would have imparted the necessary lessons. Now, the only code that will make a difference is the criminal code
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: johnneycool on October 24, 2017, 11:37:47 AM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 04:09:53 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
either way the borrower made a choice maybe a bad one but their choice.
as for bad advice what the difference between that and a car sales man telling you that a Toyota is better than a Volkswagen or a Skoda, it still buyer beware .
my reading is that everyone knows they banks are a soft target  and any kind of pressure can be put on them and with all the stage booing and hissing and they're own vurnerable state cpuld very well make them five in .

f some one has written evidence that they would be allowed back on a tracker then they have a very good chance in a courtroom of getting compensation and should do that otherwise its just hearsay even then it would be a breach of contract rather than a Crime?

The Capitalist  recovery system was a bail of of the institution of the bank to the benefit of   Account holders Big and small   and the Bond holders. all the top guys got sacked (except for boucher who brought BOI back to profitability and repaid all GOV Monies) the shareholders got slaughtered, and cheques were honered and the bondholders kept issuing loans and the world went on after a few bumpy months/years

Nationalisation by a different name you mean with the working man picking up the tab for the excesses of the elite.

True capitalist workings means the weak fail and that's what should have happened here, but it didn't and the same people are skulking around the same institutions and not a finger was laid on any of them.

Laws are written by the rich for the rich.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: magpie seanie on October 24, 2017, 12:06:28 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 23, 2017, 11:57:01 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.

Where in the developed world has it failed? Has it failed in the developing world?

Anywhere financial institutions were bailed out by governments. You couldn't have a clearer definition of failure than that.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Franko on October 24, 2017, 01:35:59 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 23, 2017, 11:57:01 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.

Where in the developed world has it failed? Has it failed in the developing world?

You can't be serious?
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Eamonnca1 on October 24, 2017, 07:46:15 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 24, 2017, 01:35:59 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 23, 2017, 11:57:01 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.

Where in the developed world has it failed? Has it failed in the developing world?

You can't be serious?

I'm deadly serious. Sure capitalism can be corrupt in places, but it's better able to recover from corruption than any alternative that's been tried. Trust me, I've been to the Soviet Union and their system did not work. Capitalism works best when corporations are small enough that they can go to the wall without having to be bailed out. The recent bailouts we saw were not capitalism in action, that was private profits and socialized losses.

As for the developing world, billions of people in China and India have been lifted out of poverty by globalization. Not many western politicians want to say that out loud because it's not a popular view, but it's an indisputable fact.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: tiempo on October 25, 2017, 09:48:12 AM
Dunphy's The Stand podcast is worth a listen on this topic.

Ep 96: David Hall, CEO of Irish Mortgage Holders, on Ireland's Delinquent Bankers

thestandwitheamondunphy.com
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Main Street on October 25, 2017, 11:31:00 AM
Quote from: Hardy on October 23, 2017, 06:22:42 PM
Quote from: rosnarun on October 23, 2017, 04:09:53 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:58:10 PM
Quote from: Esmarelda on October 23, 2017, 12:48:20 PM
Quote from: Billys Boots on October 23, 2017, 12:30:33 PM
Is the 'crime' not that the banks were 'advising' customers that foregoing their tracker mortgages was a better financial option for them (their customers)?  Which it wasn't.
I don't think so. At the time the ECB rate was relatively high and so switching from the tracker for a fixed period made obvious sense. The unwillingness to allow lenders to revert to the tracker is the issue I'm aware of.

Surely this is the point though - they were told they would be able to revert and when they wanted to they were told different, is that not correct?
either way the borrower made a choice maybe a bad one but their choice.
as for bad advice what the difference between that and a car sales man telling you that a Toyota is better than a Volkswagen or a Skoda, it still buyer beware .
my reading is that everyone knows they banks are a soft target  and any kind of pressure can be put on them and with all the stage booing and hissing and they're own vurnerable state cpuld very well make them five in .

f some one has written evidence that they would be allowed back on a tracker then they have a very good chance in a courtroom of getting compensation and should do that otherwise its just hearsay even then it would be a breach of contract rather than a Crime?

The Capitalist  recovery system was a bail of of the institution of the bank to the benefit of   Account holders Big and small   and the Bond holders. all the top guys got sacked (except for boucher who brought BOI back to profitability and repaid all GOV Monies) the shareholders got slaughtered, and cheques were honered and the bondholders kept issuing loans and the world went on after a few bumpy months/years

Even the banks themselves are not as enthusiastic in defence of their actions as yourself. In fact, they've stopped defending them, admitted that they were wrongful, agreed to refund the money embezzled and are considering the level of compensation that will be  offered. You don't compensate somebody for doing them good or for an action that is not wrongful.

"Wrongful" is simply a weasel word for "criminal" in this case, since, as I said in a previous post, obtaining money bywrongful means is theft.
The law is not applied equally.
The main reason for that in the USA  is the "collateral consequences doctrine"
Also, individual bank clerk culpability is hard to nail down.

From Matt Taibbi's book "The Divide,
Europe's largest bank HSBC admitted to laundering $850 million p/a for drug cartels, the executives who were proven beyond doubt to have made those decisions, lost their rights to bonuses for 5 years, the bank was fined USD1.8bn,  Nobody went to jail

Meanwhile on the street of New York  some man had been jailed for 45 days for having a joint in his pocket. It's not illegal to have a joint concealed in the pocket but when stopped and searched under NY state's  draconian  'disorderly conduct statute', the man's pockets were emptied and the joint was no longer concealed.
In this exact way, 50,000 arrests (marijuana joint busts) were made  even though marijuana was technically decriminalised. The court's penalty is jail time or pay a fine. Thousand of citizens have been arrested on other equally absurd charges under that statute  e.g."obstructing pedestrian traffic" and forced to pay fines of $100 or face jail.

Somehow "they" have managed to merge the interests of the importance of banking to the economy and conflating that with not jailing bank executives.
That arises from what's called the "collateral consequences doctrine".
In the USA, this doctrine dates back to the "Holder Memo" from the deputy attorney general  in the 1999 Clinton administration.
'If the prosecutor who's targeting one of these big corporate offenders is worried that it may affect innocent victims, that shareholders or innocent executives may lose their jobs, the prosecutor may consider other alternatives, other remedies besides criminal prosecutions—in other words, fines, non-prosecution agreements, deferred prosecution agreements.'



Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Franko on October 25, 2017, 02:35:27 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 24, 2017, 07:46:15 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 24, 2017, 01:35:59 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 23, 2017, 11:57:01 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.

Where in the developed world has it failed? Has it failed in the developing world?

You can't be serious?

I'm deadly serious. Sure capitalism can be corrupt in places, but it's better able to recover from corruption than any alternative that's been tried. Trust me, I've been to the Soviet Union and their system did not work. Capitalism works best when corporations are small enough that they can go to the wall without having to be bailed out. The recent bailouts we saw were not capitalism in action, that was private profits and socialized losses.

As for the developing world, billions of people in China and India have been lifted out of poverty by globalization. Not many western politicians want to say that out loud because it's not a popular view, but it's an indisputable fact.

I'm sorry Eamonn, but when losses have to be socialised to prevent the breakdown of society in general, capitalism has indisputably failed.  True capitalism doesn't work.  Proper regulatory oversight is required to stop the RBS's and Anglo's of this world becoming so monstrously big and corrupt that they can almost bring down nations.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: magpie seanie on October 25, 2017, 03:37:04 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 25, 2017, 02:35:27 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 24, 2017, 07:46:15 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 24, 2017, 01:35:59 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 23, 2017, 11:57:01 PM
Quote from: magpie seanie on October 23, 2017, 12:40:56 PM
It's amazing how blinded people are by theories that have utterly as and completely failed. Just as communism drastically failed in Eastern Europe and many other places, capitalism has spectacularly failed throughout the developed world. Globalisation has been a disaster and many people who were cheerleaders for it initially accept it has been a mess. The trouble with economic theories are they are just that - theories - and any stringent application of them is pretty much guaranteed to fail. They are not scientific despite some claims that they are, they are just opinions and need to be treated as that. The hilarious Irish groupthink (even after bailing out the banks and covering 43% of Europe's banking debt) of capitalism good, socialism bad is so nonsensical it drives me crazy. Elements of both theories have merit and should be factored into decision making but rigid adherence is just plain stupid.

Once we were forced to nationalise the banks we should have maintained control until we were 100% sure everything was cleaned up and we could never, ever be caught like that again. I think we've been too quick to re-privatise.

Where in the developed world has it failed? Has it failed in the developing world?

You can't be serious?

I'm deadly serious. Sure capitalism can be corrupt in places, but it's better able to recover from corruption than any alternative that's been tried. Trust me, I've been to the Soviet Union and their system did not work. Capitalism works best when corporations are small enough that they can go to the wall without having to be bailed out. The recent bailouts we saw were not capitalism in action, that was private profits and socialized losses.

As for the developing world, billions of people in China and India have been lifted out of poverty by globalization. Not many western politicians want to say that out loud because it's not a popular view, but it's an indisputable fact.

I'm sorry Eamonn, but when losses have to be socialised to prevent the breakdown of society in general, capitalism has indisputably failed.  True capitalism doesn't work.  Proper regulatory oversight is required to stop the RBS's and Anglo's of this world becoming so monstrously big and corrupt that they can almost bring down nations.

Exactly. It's hilarious that some people simply cannot see this.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: Eamonnca1 on October 25, 2017, 03:42:42 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 25, 2017, 02:35:27 PM
I'm sorry Eamonn, but when losses have to be socialised to prevent the breakdown of society in general, capitalism has indisputably failed.  True capitalism doesn't work.  Proper regulatory oversight is required to stop the RBS's and Anglo's of this world becoming so monstrously big and corrupt that they can almost bring down nations.

I could not agree more. But it's regulatory oversight of a capitalist system. It wasn't capitalism itself that failed, it was a poorly regulated version of it. Lack of regulation was the issue here, not the fact that it was a capitalist system.
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: rosnarun on October 25, 2017, 03:59:09 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 25, 2017, 03:42:42 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 25, 2017, 02:35:27 PM
I'm sorry Eamonn, but when losses have to be socialised to prevent the breakdown of society in general, capitalism has indisputably failed.  True capitalism doesn't work.  Proper regulatory oversight is required to stop the RBS's and Anglo's of this world becoming so monstrously big and corrupt that they can almost bring down nations.

I could not agree more. But it's regulatory oversight of a capitalist system. It wasn't capitalism itself that failed, it was a poorly regulated version of it. Lack of regulation was the issue here, not the fact that it was a capitalist system.
in what way did it fail. it has had problems but it did not fail. we are now back in a similar position to pre crash . a good seat belt wont stop you crashing but will go a long way to ensure you are not killed in the process
Title: Re: The Great Tracker Mortgages Robbery
Post by: magpie seanie on October 25, 2017, 04:01:11 PM
Quote from: Eamonnca1 on October 25, 2017, 03:42:42 PM
Quote from: Franko on October 25, 2017, 02:35:27 PM
I'm sorry Eamonn, but when losses have to be socialised to prevent the breakdown of society in general, capitalism has indisputably failed.  True capitalism doesn't work.  Proper regulatory oversight is required to stop the RBS's and Anglo's of this world becoming so monstrously big and corrupt that they can almost bring down nations.

I could not agree more. But it's regulatory oversight of a capitalist system. It wasn't capitalism itself that failed, it was a poorly regulated version of it. Lack of regulation was the issue here, not the fact that it was a capitalist system.

I don't think you really understand capitalism reading the above.