Money Australia – July 2017

(avery) #1

Both parties can benefit when the Bank of Mum and Dad comes to the rescue


H


ow can you pay 1% less on your
mortgage while your parents earn
1% more on their savings? Get your
parents to put their spare cash in your off-
set account. It’s something that Money’s
chief commentator, Paul Clitheroe, has
been doing for some time.
In our October 2016 issue he revealed
this: “Our two working kids have a pretty
chunky mortgage. Now in our early 60s,
Vicki and I have a proportion of our portfo-
lio in solid and safe cash. Things like term
deposits. These are paying about 2.5%. Our
kids’ mortgages are about 4.5%. So it makes
sense for us and most others in our situa-
tion to get a loan document drawn up and
put our money into the kids' mortgage off-
set account. They pay us halfway between
the rate we can earn and the rate they pay,
so about 3.5%. We get a percentage point
more, they pay a point less. Basically we
harvest the bank’s margin. It is all secured
by property and as the money is in an
offset account, we have instant access.”
It sounds so simple I’m surprised that
more cashed-up parents aren’t doing it. But
as Paul outlines, you need to be sure that
you’ve set up the arrangement correctly.
A risk, of course, is that there’s nothing
to stop the children from accessing the
funds in the offset account and using them
for their own purposes. Then there’s the
issue of non-payment. If the children fail to
meet their mortgage repayments, the bank
would be able to claw back the parents’
money in the offset account.
And another potential problem is: What
if your child is in a relationship that goes
sour? Who takes what?
“The parents have no rights with the
lender or transparency over the mortgage
of offset account transactions,” says
Dominique Bergel-Grant, a director of
Leapfrog Financial. “It’s a complete trust
situation.”
Bergel-Grant recommends that parents
ensure the children have adequate personal

Win-win for parents and kids


Finance expert and author ofThe Great
$20 Adventure,Money’seditor Effie Zahos
appears regularly on TV and radio. She
started her career in banking.

How to set up a
loan agreement

M


ortgage broker Michael Saliba, from
Smartline Personal Mortgage Advis-
ers, says there are two ways to set up a
loan arrangement between parents and
children. Both involve using a solicitor to
draw up a document, which would cost
between $1500 and $2500.


  1. Parties enter into a loan arrangement
    secured by a second mortgage – usually
    this is on the home of the first mortgagee
    (the child). Approval would be required by
    the first mortgagee, who would need to
    ensure they have enough equity in the
    property. If there is, there are small
    charges for producing a title and listing
    the new encumbrance on it.

  2. A higher-risk option would be to create
    a caveat on the title in the names of the
    parties lending the money, though this
    offers less security to them from a legal
    standpoint as the mortgagee would have
    all rights to the property if the initial loan
    was not managed and the property went
    into foreclosure. There is the potential here
    for the parents to lose their money com-
    pletely and they would then have to pursue
    the amount through the courts.


Effie Zahos BANKING


insurances – for example, income protec-
tion – should they not be able to work due
to illness or disability.
Putting the legal aspects aside, from
a return point of view it’s a no-brainer.
The kids win by paying less interest and
the parents win by picking up a bit more
interest. Right now if you opt to keep your
cash in an online saver, the returns after
tax aren’t keeping up with the cost of living.
Say, for example, you earn 2.5% and you’re
on the top marginal tax rate, your net
return would be 1.3% – well below inflation.
However, as Bergel-Grant warns, any

income received would be taxable. It’s also
important that the money should not be
treated as a gift by Centrelink, as this could
have significant consequences on any cur-
rent or future benefits that the parents may
receive. Which is why everything comes
back to a solid document, some good advice
and some good communication between
the parents and the kids.
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