Sameer Tiwari, a Pune based mechanical engineer, thought he had made a
"prudent decision" by opting for a fixed rate, home loan five years ago from
a reputed national bank.

Three years after the date of disbursement, Sameer received a letter, which
said it was time for renewal of his loan and that the interest on his fixed
home loan had been increased by 0.5 per cent. On checking with the bank, he
learned that there was a clause in the agreement that said the fixed rate
was only for a period of three years and not for the entire tenure!

This letter brought endless, sleepless nights to Sameer and his family� now,
they had to recalculate and replan all their income sources and planned
expenses because the "fixed EMIs (Equated Monthly Instalments)" will
increase!

*What is a loan agreement?*

A loan agreement is a 'contract' entered into between the borrower and the
lender (banks and financial institutions) that regulates the terms of a
loan. The loan agreement comes into picture immediately after the bank
appraises your credit and the property that you have identified.

*The agreement and the fine prints...*

In the euphoria to acquire that dream house, various clauses in the loan
agreement are often overlooked. However, these clauses have a significant
bearing on areas ranging from interest rates to repayment schedules. Reading
home loan agreements is generally viewed as a sheer formality and one always
tends to ignore points that the agreement mentions. Moreover, the legal
language used in the document often seems more alien than human!

In any case, not reading a loan agreement thoroughly can land you in a soup.
Here are some clauses, which should be searched for inside a loan agreement
and be clarified with your HFC (Housing Finance Company):

*Reset Clause on Fixed Rates:* Banks have introduced the reset clause in
their fixed rate, home loan agreements so that they can increase interest
rates in case the market rates increase in future. This effectively makes
fixed rate loans equivalent to floating rate ones. This gives the banks an
escape from interest rate surges but is a disadvantage for the borrower who
is mostly unaware about such content in their agreement. Typically, the
period for such reset clause varies from two to five years depending on the
bank or housing finance company you borrow from. So read this clause in your
loan agreement carefully.

**

*Force Majeure Clause:* There may be certain loopholes in your home loan
agreement that allows the bank or home loan company to unfix and raise the
fixed interest rate under exceptional circumstances. This will be mentioned
under the 'force majeure' clause of your agreement. However, the
differentiation between 'exceptional circumstances' and normal circumstances
is always a tough task.

*For e.g.* A cut in banks' prime lending rate is not automatically
translating into reduction of all PLR-linked loan rates. The reason being
cited is that the bank's margins are under severe stress due to lending rate
cuts. They feel interest rates on some existing sub-PLR loans do not even
cover their cost of funds and any further fall in those sub-PLR loans will
worsen the matter. Therefore, some public sector banks have revised the
existing loan contracts in case of select sub-PLR borrowers, by using the
'force majeure' clause, meaning a 'situation beyond control'.

*Defining a Fault:* A 'fault' for a layman often means a non-payment of an
EMI during the loan tenure. However, your bank or HFC may have a different
meaning for this term. The home loan agreement of few banks defines *fault
as a case when the borrower expires, the borrower is divorced (in case of
more than a single borrower), or the borrower is/are involved in any civil
litigation or criminal offence*. Therefore, you must be clear what your
lender means by the term 'fault'.

*Security cover at times of falling property rates:* This clause states that
a bank is eligible to demand additional security when property prices fall.
Even if you are loyal on your EMI payments, this clause demands a security
cover in addition to your loan amount and if a borrower fails to provide
such a security then he/ she may be declared a defaulter by the lender.

*Floating is Fixed and vice versa: *Floating rate as well as fixed rate home
loans are linked to the Benchmark Prime Lending Rate of a bank or the HFC
from which you take a home loan. Hence, if the BPLR is 13.5 per cent and
floating rate home loans are at a discount of 1.5 per cent to the BPLR, then
the interest rate on a floating rate home loan is 12 per cent. So whenever
the BPLR is raised, then the interest to be paid on the floating rate home
loan goes up. The vice versa also holds true.

However, banks and HFCs do not show the same alacrity to reduce the interest
rates, which they might have shown when increasing it. When interest rates
come down, banks and HFCs offer lower rates to new customers but existing
customer continue paying the higher interest rates. Check with the bank or
HFC regarding the details about such clauses.

These clauses are overlooked by most home loan borrowers and some of them
eventually end up paying interest rates, fees, or hidden charges completely
out of the blue. It is imperative that you have a thorough understanding of
such clauses with your bank or HFC.

*
http://www.rediff.com/money/2009/jan/23perfin-taking-a-home-loan-beware-of-these-facts.htm
*

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""GLOBAL SPECULATORS"" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/globalspeculators?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to