- Joined
- 23 April 2008
- Posts
- 1,838
- Reactions
- 599
Macquarie Bank up to its usual dirty tricks.
heraldsun.com.au
George Lekakis
May 29, 2008 12:00am
Macquarie's big blue
MACQUARIE Bank is hoping it can grab thousands of dollars from up to 1000 borrowers set to refinance their home loans with rival lenders.
In an embarrassing move, Macquarie's mortgage arm has told borrowers that "errors" were made in the wording of their official loan contracts signed since 2005.
Macquarie has written to the affected customers in a bid to change contractual terms so that it can levy fees to recover mortgage insurance from borrowers about to refinance their loans.
Macquarie has been hit with a wave of refinancings in the past two months after it hiked rates on most of its home loan products above 10 per cent.
"When clients take out loans with us they're told verbally that we will absorb their lender's mortgage insurance if they don't discharge the loan within three years," she said.
"These letters are a correction because this condition was not included in the loan agreements.
"It's not changing the contract because all we're doing is correcting something that was obviously an error."
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23775094-664,00.html
heraldsun.com.au
George Lekakis
May 29, 2008 12:00am
Macquarie's big blue
MACQUARIE Bank is hoping it can grab thousands of dollars from up to 1000 borrowers set to refinance their home loans with rival lenders.
In an embarrassing move, Macquarie's mortgage arm has told borrowers that "errors" were made in the wording of their official loan contracts signed since 2005.
Macquarie has written to the affected customers in a bid to change contractual terms so that it can levy fees to recover mortgage insurance from borrowers about to refinance their loans.
Macquarie has been hit with a wave of refinancings in the past two months after it hiked rates on most of its home loan products above 10 per cent.
"When clients take out loans with us they're told verbally that we will absorb their lender's mortgage insurance if they don't discharge the loan within three years," she said.
"These letters are a correction because this condition was not included in the loan agreements.
"It's not changing the contract because all we're doing is correcting something that was obviously an error."
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,23775094-664,00.html