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Interest rate risks hide
behind home loans in
A visitor looks at
the mock-up of a new apartment complex at a showroom in
Many banks are offering credit
packages that allow homebuyers to borrow up to 70 percent of the value of the
apartment they want to purchase, but there are risks behind these seemingly
attractive lending plans.
When he was told about one such credit package, Le Van
Lam eagerly visited several banks to learn more about a home loan
that could help him buy a VND1.4 billion (US$65,895) apartment in Tan Phu
District,
Lam, who works for a construction material firm in the
city, said he and his wife needed to borrow VND900 million ($42,361), as they
had saved up VND500 million ($23,534).
Employees at one of the banks told Lam that he had
three loan plans to choose from, all of which have a 15-year term.
The first plan offers a zero interest rate for the
first month of the loan term, and two percent a year for the next 11 months.
Starting from the second year, the lending interest will be the 13-month
deposit interest rate at that time, plus a fixed 4 percent a year.
Under another plan, the loan would have a fixed 8
percent a year interest rate for the first six months, and then 12 percent a
year for the next six months. The interest rate for the second year would be
the 13-month deposit interest rate at that time, plus a fixed 5 percent a
year.
This means if the deposit interest rate for a 13-month
saving is 6.6 percent, the lending interest Lam would pay in the second year
of his prospective loan would be 10.6 percent a year under the first plan,
and 11.6 percent in the second one.
“What worried me was that we do not know how the
deposit interest rates would change in the next 15 years,” Lam said.
The low interest rates of seven or eight percent are
only applied for a short period of time, and it is dangerous that there are
no fixed interest from that point on, he added.
Lam eventually decided to delay his plan to buy an
apartment, fearing that he may “incur bankruptcy and lose the apartment” with
such home loans.
Fifteen years of pressure
Taking out bank loans and amortizing the debt is the
most feasible solution for people with decent income to be able to afford an
apartment in
But for Vo Ho Thuc Doan, choosing this solution means
living under pressure for 15 years, thanks to the burden of clearing a loan.
The 32-year-old white-collar worker obtained a VND620
million ($29,182) home loan to buy a VND920 million ($43,302) apartment.
Since last December, Doan has had to pay around VND11
million ($518) a month to clear her debt.
“I have to set aside this amount every month, no matter
what happens,” she said.
“As life is full of things we don’t expect, there were
months when the payment date was near while I did not have enough money.”
Nguyen Khoa, a public servant in
In 2010, Khoa had to put his apartment up for sale so
he could repay the home loan he had borrowed for the property.
While he was able to pay VND10 million ($471) a month
to clear the debt at 12 percent a year in 2008, the interest rate rose to 18
percent a year in 2010, thus doubling the monthly amount he had to pay.
“We had to sell our house, as we could not afford VND20
million ($942) a month,” he said.
Tuoi Tre news
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Thứ Hai, 6 tháng 10, 2014
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