Articles, tagged with "endowment mortgage", page 1
01st July 2010
Back in the 1980s word went around that there was a wonderful new way to pay your mortgage. In those days the process of getting and running a mortgage was almost sacrosanct, and little variation was available. A fairly common route to take was to open an...
Read >
Author:
Quintin Whitfield
31st May 2010
What do you do if you are looking to buy a house? You sift through a series of mortgage loans. What is the best kind of mortgage loan? That would be based on how much you are intending to borrow and on the rate of interest that you would be able to afford...
Read >
Author:
Dirk Steele
29th March 2010
What Does Remortgage Mean?
In plain, when you remortgage you will reassign your mortgage from one lender to another one with the objective of getting a better deal. Remortgaging is a immense business, with around one-third of all property loans in the...
Read >
Author:
Mark Jenkins
02nd October 2009
Repayment Mortgage
The most straightforward form of mortgage repayment with capital and interest paid off monthly from day one. It works just like an ordinary personal loan except over a longer term.
In the early years, you repay mostly interest, ...
Read >
Author:
txyaffiliate
16th September 2009
Why should not anybody be interested to acquire a home in exchange of interest only? This was conceived idea behind origin of endowment mortgage policies. Endowment mortgage policy was really created with good intensions and would have proved most practic...
Read >
Author:
Creative SEO Content
16th September 2009
A large number of people are affected in UK due to mis-selling of Endowment Mortgage policies when sold heavily in 80s to 90s. General convincing factor or selling propositions were projection of policies being able to provide much higher maturity values ...
Read >
Author:
Creative SEO Content
10th September 2009
Endowment mortgage loans are one of the most controversial types of loans, and have received good and bad press in equal measure. If you are looking for a mortgage loan, then you should look at an endowment mortgage loan as one option. Despite these loans...
Read >
Author:
Cesar Booth
10th September 2009
Many homeowners are being caught in the worsening endowment mortgage scandal. Figures from the insurance industry show that for the first time, the majority of endowment backed mortgage holders are being warned they will probably not be able to fully repa...
Read >
Author:
michael challiner
21st January 2009
The concept behind a mortgage is relatively straightforward, you borrow money in order to buy a house and then pay interest on the loan over a prolonged period until you have paid firstly all the interest, and then the loan itself and ultimately end up in...
Read >
Author:
Chris
17th January 2009
Who becomes a Personal Travel Group agent? Some people originally join just to cut out the middle man and make great savings - they then go on to become really successful agents. We have seen other cases of people who have been made redundant from their r...
Read >
Author:
Young Blood
01st December 2008
Life insurance is a useful investment to have in your portfolio. It can give you peace of mind, with the knowledge that your family have been provided for in the event of your death. Alternatively it may provide you with a nest egg if you have chosen an e...
Read >
Author:
michael challiner
26th November 2008
The story of the endowment mortgage is now written into the history of house purchase in the UK - and engraved into the memories of those unfortunate buyers, whose hopes of easing the financial strain of buying a home came to nought. Having said that, the...
Read >
Author:
michael challiner
08th September 2008
An explanation of terms commonly associated with buying and selling homes in the UK.
Bridging Loan - a bridging loan is a short term loan taken out to bridge the gap between buying a new home and selling an existing property. The loan bridges the gap ...
Read >
Author:
Rich Bendall
25th June 2008
Endowment mortgages are policies that were marketed on the grounds that they would pay off a person's mortgage once the policy matured. The policy is intended to be a long-term investment whereby the homeowner would pay premiums into the policy - which ...
Read >
Author:
mpressman
20th May 2008
When you took up your fixed rate deal for a set period were you one of those really astute and organised people who carried on paying the same as before each month to reduce your balance more quickly? If you were the step up to present day interest rates ...
Read >
Author:
lexisclick