Multi Currency Mortgage
This service is available for anybody wishing to mortgage their UK
property. The criteria are:
-
Max mortgage 65% of property valuation
-
Minimum salary £75,000 pa or currency equivalent
-
Loans up to 3x salary or 2.5x joint salary
You must understand the risk that it is possible for the capital amount
you owe to increase as well as to decrease.
Why multi currency mortgages?
There are three main benefits to managed currency mortgages:
- Reduction in the capital value of the debt.
For example, if we move your debt into the Japanese yen and the yen falls
by 10% against the pound then your debt is 10% smaller than when we started.
- Tax efficiency.
For private individuals borrowing against their main residence the benefits
of the programme are tax free. (Under current UK tax legislation,
we are advised that the Inland Revenue does not regard reductions in the
sterling equivalent of a mortgage (as opposed to gains on assets) to be liable
to Capital Gains tax, if such gains are made by individuals in the context
of borrowing secured on their main residence. You should obtain confirmation
of your tax position from your tax adviser.)
Clients who joined ECU's managed currency mortgage programme at its
inception in 1988 are now able to fully .pay off all loans taken out
in 1988 with the benefits of the programme - without having paid a penny
more than they would have paid with a conventional sterling interest
only mortgage.
This performance has afforded our clients the freedom to use all the
proceeds of any endowment policies originally designed to pay off the
loan, in any way they wished - for example, paying school fees, investing
or financing their businesses or retirements.
Text from an article written by Cormac Naughten
of ECU , published in plc Director Magazine September/ October 2003.
In particular, this article explains the risks associated with single
currency mortages e.g. euro or yen, in comparison with managed multi-currency
debt products ...
'Foreign Affairs'
Turning Liabilities into Assets:
As house prices have soared to record levels wealthy individuals have had to
borrow more than ever before in order to facilitate property purchases. The
resulting debt mountain is now larger than that seen in the 1980s, the key
difference being that there is no high inflation to erode the real value
of debt. Rather, the main worry for economies such as Japan, Germany and
even the US is deflation rather than inflation. In the event of deflation
the real value of debt actually increases. The implication for borrowers
is that their mortgage debt will persist and weigh more heavily than at any
other time in recent memory. While the marketplace is flooded with innovative
alternative investment products, few private banks offer solutions for the
reduction or management of liabilities.
Large borrowers face a second challenge. Whereas with asset management
products large transactions often attract keener pricing, those looking
to borrow in excess of £500,000 find themselves excluded from most of
the discount deals available from High Street lenders. Indeed, many have
considerable difficulty bettering 1.5% over the UK base rate. This puts
many high earners in the uncomfortable position of paying considerably
more for their mortgages than their colleagues with much smaller loans.
An increasing number of financially astute borrowers believe that they
have found the solution to the problems of both large borrowings and
competitive interest rates by switching to interest-only loans denominated
in foreign currencies.
Currency lending facilities are not generally available from High Street
lenders. They tend only to be offered by a select group of private
banks. Clients are expected to meet rigorous entry criteria. In addition
to
a minimum income of £100,000 and relatively low income multiples
(2.5 to 3 times) they are expected to be financially sophisticated and
to
have an appetite for risk. These facilities offer three major benefits:
Debt Reduction
If the currency in which the loan is denominated in weakens against sterling
then the sterling equivalent of the loan is reduced.
Loan Reduction Example:
£1million @ 180 (Yen to the Pound) = ¥ 180 million
If the pound strengthens to 200 Yen to the Pound the loan could be converted
back into sterling to crystallise a loan reduction: ¥180 million/ 200 = £900,000
Interest Rate savings
Even with UK rates at their recent low levels UK borrowers can make considerable
savings by borrowing in foreign currencies. Over the last 15 years the cost
of servicing loans in the world's major currencies has been 40-75% lower
than it would have been in sterling.
Tax Efficiency
For an individual borrowing against their main residence in foreign currency,
neither the interest rate savings nor the capital reduction of their mortgage
have been liable to capital gains tax.
There is currently considerable demand from borrowers earning
in dollars or euros for loans in these currencies on their UK properties.
Given today's international employment market, directors of major
global companies are often moving to the UK, and UK executives
are themselves expected to move abroad. Many "Inpatriates" (executives
moving to the UK) and expatriates seek to match the currency of
their income with that of their mortgage to avoid conversion costs.
Directors of multinational firms can often expect some or all of
their compensation to be paid in euros or US dollars and there
are a number of private banks looking to persuade these customers
of the merits of a loan in the same currency. But are they right
to do so - surely this combination of loan reduction and lower
interest payments sounds too good to be true?
Pitfalls
If all this sounds familiar it is because many people did take out currency
loans in the 1980s and early 1990s - some with disastrous consequences. The
preferred vehicles for most were single-currency loans in either Japanese
yen or Swiss francs as they seemed to offer a low interest rate compared
to the double-digit rates seen in the UK. Unfortunately these borrowers saw
the pound weaken considerably against other currencies, causing the sterling
equivalent of their loans to increase dramatically. For example, a million
pounds borrowed in yen in 1980 would have become four and a half million
pounds by 1995.
Consequently lending banks now agree conversion limits with their
customers before they take out a currency loan to limit these dramatic
increases. Typically these are set 10-15% higher than the starting
loan balance. If the sterling equivalent of the client's loan then
rises to that predefined limit, the bank reserves the right to
covert the loan back to sterling thus crystallising a permanent
10-15% increase in the loan and subjecting the loan once again
to sterling interest rates.
Currencies can easily fluctuate by 15% over the course of a year.
Accurately forecasting a ten-year view (a typical mortgage term)
on a particular currency is almost impossible. What is certain
is the historical weakening of sterling against other major currencies.
At the start of the 1980s the pound stood at 550 to the yen, 2.40
to the dollar and 4.50 to the Swiss franc. Today it stands some
35-65% lower at 185, 1.60 and 2.20 respectively. This risk of an
increase in the size of the loan itself makes the impact of currency
movements on interest payments pale into insignificance.
Managing the risks:
The need to manage these risks led to the emergence of the multi-currency mortgage.
This offered clients the flexibility of denominating their loans in the currencies
of their choice and, if world events altered the outlook for this currency,
the client could switch into another currency at will.
For most individuals, the volatility of the foreign exchange markets
and the need for extensive analysis and monitoring has meant that
managing foreign exchange risk extends beyond the scope of their
resources. In the absence of the client having currency trading
experience, most lending banks will not extend a multi-currency
loan facility unless an approved currency management firm has been
engaged.
A currency debt manager's role is to seek to maintain the client's
debt in currencies that are expected to weaken against (or at least
remain stable against) the pound, consistent - where possible -
with an interest rate advantage. Given sterling's long term propensity
for weakness, this is no simple task.
The approach of today's leading players in currency debt management
mirrors that of leading hedge funds. They blend technical and fundamental
analysis, underpinned by market intelligence and experience provided
by investment committees comprised of some of the industry's most
highly acclaimed economists and analysts.
Over the last 15 years trading systems have been developed in conjunction with
the lending banks that allow managers the flexibility to adopt a range of 24-hour
risk management tools for entering and exiting currency positions. Despite
this, prospective clients are advised that they must be able to withstand a
permanent increase of at least 15% in the sterling equivalent of their loan.
While currency borrowing is not without risk, neither is leaving
liabilities unmanaged. For those that are prepared to take these
risks on board the benefits can be considerable. Clients of some
currency managers have seen their loans reduced by some 45% over
the last seven years. Borrowers in other countries have firmly
grasped these benefits. For example, in Austria the currency loan
market stands at 43 billion euros or one in ten of all mortgages.
Recently Europe has been held up as a model for the UK mortgage
market. Perhaps without realising it commentators may have stumbled
upon the right idea after all.
The ECU Group plc
Regulated by the Financial Services Authority
73 Brook Street, London, W1K 4HX
Tel: 020 7245 1010, Fax: 020 7245 0088
Website: www.ecugroup.com
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