Stamp duty

Equity release. Doesn’t free up the house dummy.
Our friends parents took out £30k equity release years ago and…….. stuck it in the bank! When the mum sold their house a year ago to move in with them, it sold for £650k. They had to pay £50k because she hadn’t died and only ended up walking away with £300k. What idiots!
 
Our friends parents took out £30k equity release years ago and…….. stuck it in the bank! When the mum sold their house a year ago to move in with them, it sold for £650k. They had to pay £50k because she hadn’t died and only ended up walking away with £300k. What idiots!
Have you made a mistake with your sums?
£30k in the bank for say 10 years will probably yield about £15k interest, so a final sum of about £45k.
The house sold for £650, bu they had to pay £50 for the Equity Release, leaving £600k, plus the Bank Account is £645k, not far off the £650k sale price?
What's the problem? They had that lump sum in the bank for all those years for emergency funding, or whatever.
 
Our friends parents took out £30k equity release years ago and…….. stuck it in the bank! When the mum sold their house a year ago to move in with them, it sold for £650k. They had to pay £50k because she hadn’t died and only ended up walking away with £300k. What idiots!
It’s an absolute scam and withdrawing the money to put in savings is the dumbest thing ever.
 
Have you made a mistake with your sums?
£30k in the bank for say 10 years will probably yield about £15k interest, so a final sum of about £45k.
The house sold for £650, bu they had to pay £50 for the Equity Release, leaving £600k, plus the Bank Account is £645k, not far off the £650k sale price?
What's the problem? They had that lump sum in the bank for all those years for emergency funding, or whatever.
You are taking out a loan with zero repayment and charges and fees loaded on at between 6.5 - 8%. That is on top of any “equity” growth clause that allows them a slice of increases.
 
Have you made a mistake with your sums?
£30k in the bank for say 10 years will probably yield about £15k interest, so a final sum of about £45k.
The house sold for £650, bu they had to pay £50 for the Equity Release, leaving £600k, plus the Bank Account is £645k, not far off the £650k sale price?
What's the problem? They had that lump sum in the bank for all those years for emergency funding, or whatever.
It's a simple concept. Too simple for some including liar MBK.
 
It’s an absolute scam and withdrawing the money to put in savings is the dumbest thing ever.
I don't disagree. But for some it's a good opportunity to have the wonga now.

You are taking out a loan with zero repayment and charges and fees loaded on at between 6.5 - 8%. That is on top of any “equity” growth clause that allows them a slice of increases.
Yes, having the wonga now costs money.
Just like in situations like Dragon's Den, you sell a share of your asset in order to have the cash, now.
That's how finance works.
But it doesn't explain Mottie's mathematical mistakes.
 
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