Friday, April 17, 2009

A Simple Loan Rate Appeal Letter



I just can't believe it.

I can't believe the TRUTH about the existence of certain groups of people that are not willing to do a simple task to save their money but instead cramping up their tiny brains speaking about surviving economic crisis or making their money work harder.

Fine if you may argue that these people don't know YET about such money saving task.

I'm talking about revisions of your housing mortgage interest rates.

Firstly, I would like to make a few points about your monthly repayment.

#1: If the bank've reduced your repayment amount, that doesn't mean you pay lesser in total.

Meaning if your current repayment amount is MYR1000 per month and your bank sent you a letter informing you that now you can pay MYR900 instead of the original RM1000, beware.

The rationale can be explained like this:

When the bank calculates the monthly instalment amount upon the creation of the offer letter, usually the calculation is made using some baseline rate at that moment, e.g. Base Lending Rate, or your first year effective rate.

Let's assume now that rate is 5% and the repayment amount is MYR1000.00. Also assume that your contract rate is BLR-2%.

If the effective rate remains stationary over a particular period of time, the MYR1000 is properly follow the amortization table schedule. In a better scenario, the effective rate dropped and the partial amount of the MYR1000.00 is used to deduct directly into the loan principal. Good because you can cut short your repayment tenure, e.g. settle the entire in 25 years instead of the original 30 years tenure.

But what if the effective rate increased... Imagine the BLR now is 8% and your effective contract rate will become (8-2)% = 6%. Now the MYR1000 is insufficient because the increased interest amount will "eat up" the principal repayment portion thus you will spend more money the loan and you might get surprised when you are required to fork out a relatively large amount of money for the last instalment of the loan in order to orderly complete your loan obligation. Bad idea.

Solution: Make sure you pay your monthly instalment according to the real effective rate instead of the static amount in the loan contract. Some banks do notify you about the new amount to be paid whenever the effective rate changed BUT there are banks "forgot" to do it.


#2: Fire Insurance, Misc and Other Charges debited into your loan
If your loan requires the purchases of MLTA or fire insurance or etc that auto-debited the amount into your loan, these amounts will become part of the overall principal you need to pay off if you didn't offset them immediately using an equivalent amount of extra loan repayment. Don't underestimate the magnitude of these amounts because the interests on them will get compounded over let say 30 freaking years.

Solution: Don't do the auto-debit thingy or make sure you do extra repayment to offset these extraordinary items in your account.


#3: Make sure your effective interest rate is reasonable
I remember there was a time when a fixed rate 5.99% mortgage loan package is considered as an attractive market deal. Of course, if you view the fluctuation of the market interest rates over 20 to 30 years, then stick to 5.99% for the entire tenure does make some senses. But hey, at this moment, people are paying say BLR-2% which translated into effective rate of 3.55% and you are paying extra 2.44% which is roughly extra MYR2440 each year for every 100k principal outstanding you borrowed, i.e. an extra MYR7329 for a 300K outstanding for 1 year. And you should know that due to amortization effects the first few years of repayment contributed the most to the total interest paid.

Who cares what will be the rates 10 years from now? What's matter is to SAVE money NOW.

Among many options, more commonly you can opt to either APPEAL or REFINANCE your loan.

For fixed rate package, it is not likely that the institution will accept your appeal to reduce the rate because they mayargue that in the long run the interest rates might still shoot up and it's a risk to them too.

NOTE: It is true that if you don't want to withstand the OPPORTUNITY and RISK from interest rate fluctuation, then you better stick to your fixed rate package. No point shouting later when the interest rates make a cinematic return to sky high.

So, you might consider refinancing your loan meaning taking a new loan to substitute the fixed rate one. Refinancing package might include certain options such as zero moving costs and blah. Ask your banker thoroughly about how much you can save by refinancing because this way will involves paying legal fees and doing the entire process of going through land office and blah.

Another option is to make an appeal to the bank to REVISE your effective rate.

Plainly speaking: Ask them to reduce.

It is in the bank's interests to retain customers/loans when the competition is fierce due to volatile interest rate movements and consumer spending patterns. The idea is simple: If the rate is really reduceable and the bank refused to reduce, then REFINANCE and move away from that blood sucking bank. Loss of loan accounts mean loss of PROFITs.

The trick is that the appealed rate wouldn't be as good as refinancing rates although they can be comparable. What the bank have in mind is to remove your economic incentive to REFINANCE so that you don't feel like going through all the trouble just to save a couple of hundred bucks YET the bank still earn a level of interest enough to cover their required rate of returns.

Note: Even when your loan is within the locking period (Usually 3 or 5 years), you can still appeal for a reduction if the savings are large enough to justify it.


Solution: Talk to your banker about APPEALing your rate and use the following template if you like to submit the appeal application. The template is a Word 2000/2003 document and you need to replace some information inside with your own details.

Loan Appeal Letter Template





Reply to: tigerspank33
- If the bank offered a not so satisfactory rate to you after your appeal, you can always reject it and either appeal again or consider refinancing options.


Reply to: meitang
- Yes, the bank might charge you a minor fee (usually less than MYR100) ONLY after your appeal is approved. No fee should be applicable if say the appeal is being rejected.

Reply to: mmmsss
- You need to speak to your banker to find out the potential savings because refinancing will involve more costs than simply appealing to reduce the rate.



4 comments:

Isabel said...

Hi Nerdy Eddy,

It's good that you wrote something regarding the loan appeal stuff. I am in stage where I want to appeal for my housing loan that your article came in handy.

Could you re-post the download link of the loan appeal letter?
The link seems broken.

Thanks.

KM said...

Hi Nerdy Eddy,

I have the same request as Isabel, I am not able to download the letter in your article.. If possible, do help to re-post the link or file...

Thanks..

Eddy said...

Hi KM,

I lost the old version of the document. Nonetheless, I've attached another one for your perusal. Hope you get a better rate deal :)

KM said...

Hi Eddy,

Thanks for the response, I got a lousy deal due to initial deal with developer.. I hope to get a better deal..

Will let you know how it goes...

Many thanks..