I reckon I created something like 1984’s website home page back in year 11. In 1989! They couldn’t find even US$100 to ask a high school kid to, you know, professionalize this into the 21st century?
However, there you have it, they’re global venture capital partners, or frankly let’s call them what they are: speculative private capital. The same type of private capital is flooding the global financial system.
Back to Sucasa, unless you are buying in each capital city in Australia, then your mortgage application won’t pass their ‘postcode’ test. Then there are the loan products themselves.
And it’s the small print that truly shows you the difference between traditional forms of lending and private capital venture funds.
For each of their five loan products they offer is a sheet called the target market determination (TMD).
Inside each is a description of their target market, who is ineligible to apply for one of their loans and the TMD annual reviews. I found this last part interesting.
Every 12 months a periodic review is conducted across each loan product. Within that review period exist certain trigger points. Listed are some of the specific events that may cause a review outside of the normal period.
Obviously, things like arrears or late payments may trigger a review of your covenant with them. That’s hardly surprising.
Then there is this one: we identify unexpected trends in consumer outcomes which are significantly inconsistent with the expected product performance.
I asked ChatGPT to translate this – it crashed.
Nowhere on the website is there any detail whatsoever on what these unexpected trends are, nor how they measure significantly inconsistent, nor what product performance means?
So, allow me to take a shot in the dark. When the land market crashes, and you’re 100% leveraged, you get a call from us. Every hour. Every day.
With one request. Give us back our money.
Now, “who” owns your mortgage is a complete mystery. Is it the credit manager, is it the US based venture funds? Someone else? And if you happen to get approached by Sucasa, what legal means do you have to dispute their identified unexpected trends?
In their FAQ section, here is an explanation for the question “Who is actually funding my loan?”
Our funding sources will change over time. Ultimately, we partner with funders (banks, non-bank mortgage funders and credit funds) who believe in our vision and the quality of our customers – young, reliable Australian families.
Ever heard of “rehypothecation”? It’s where a lender bundles up dozens of loans and then sells them to a third party who gets the interest payments. You have then cleared your balance sheet to lend even more.
Change funding sources will change over time to it’s no longer our business who owns your mortgage.
This is the fine balancing act that you must now walk for the remainder of this current cycle. The noise surrounding lenders like this as the solution for young and old to get onto the property ladder is going to become deafening. Social media has seen to that.
Only those who show good emotional intelligence and have a strong understanding of the land markets, and their unique timing, are going to be the ones who make the right decisions here.
Here’s something that can help you – a membership to the Boom Bust Bulletin (BBB).
Let me teach you about the history of the 18.6-year Real Estate Cycle and just how liberating it is to use the timing of the land market to improve your investments.
It is this same history that can help you. We call it ‘remembering the future.’ All for just US$4 a month, superb value!
You can see just how careful you now need to be. Don’t expose your financial security to making the wrong decision at the wrong time.
Replace emotional need with informed critical thinking and win.
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