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MORTGAGE FLOOR CLAUSES

Floor Clauses in Spanish Mortgages

What does floor clause mean?

A floor clause (or “cláusula suelo” in Spanish), usually entered in a financial agreement in relation to a cap floor or minimum interest rate, refers to a specific condition generally included in financial contracts, principally loans.

How does it work?

As a loan can be agreed based upon fixed or variable interest rate, the loans agreed with variable rates are usually linked to an official interest rate (in the UK the LIBOR, in Spain the EURIBOR) plus an extra amount (known as spread or margin).

Thus, what the mortgagee actually pays the bank every month is: a portion of the capital plus the benchmark or interest reference plus the spread.

The latter (the spread) is, from the bank’s perspective, the profit for lending the capital; from the borrower’s is the price of using the monies borrowed.

Since the parties will want some certainty on the amounts actually paid and received in case of sudden and sharp movements of the benchmark, they can, and usually do, agree a system by which they are sure that the payments will not go too low (on the bank’s side, so they count on a certain and regular profit) or too high (on the borrower side, so the payments keep in an affordable level all throughout the mortgage term).

This system of limitation of the interest getting too low or too high, is that one known as “floor and cap clauses”.

Is this a new issue?

These schemes have been used for many years in banking, and have been deemed as a useful way to keep the risk and uncertainties of the signing parties of a mortgage at bay.

However in Spain, from around a decade ago, the original scheme has been corrupted to a point in which it has taken the Spanish Supreme Court to issue a Judgment in order to protect the consumers / mortgagees from the constant abuses that the banks inflicted on them.

Recent history

The problem started around the years between 2001 and 2003. In the beginning of the last decade thousands of properties were sold every year in Spain (many of them to foreigners, as second residences), and thousands of mortgages were agreed to finance those purchases.

In a crazy push to gain new clients, the local banks had to look for fresh ways to attract new borrowers.

How did the banks sell mortgages with such a clause?

In the midst of what is now considered irresponsible lending, a way to appeal to the new applicants, to all those looking for offers on how to finance their new homes, was to offer mortgages with a ridiculous, almost symbolic, interest rate, linked to an also very low margin.

Ads reading “mortgage at EURIBOR plus 0.5 %” or very similar were typical for almost a decade.

The competition between the banks was fierce in offering lower and lower rates.

Since the EURIBOR, or benchmark, was low (it started the decade at 3% and ended up in 2010 below 1%), a quick calculation provided attractive figures: the repayment costs virtually nothing in the medium and long term, and with a lease it would be a profitable investment.

I did not know about the clause. Should the floor clause have been explained to me?
At this point very few borrowers, if any, would read the whole mortgage agreement before signing it, let alone having it translated and fully explain by an independent accountant or solicitor.

There were a couple of years at a fixed rate, typically 3.5 %, but that was just the beginning – for 15, or 20 or more years the monthly payment was going to be ridiculously low.

The buyers jumped on these offers – at the peak of the property bonanza (between 2004 and 2006) one million properties were sold every year in Spain.

After signing the agreements, the borrowers started repaying the loans for the first couple of years, at the initial fixed rate, expecting a drastic reduction of the payments once they go to variable.

However, after some years into the term of the contract, the monthly repayments went up. They called their bank managers commenting on a mistake in the last month’s charge, but the reply they got was that there was nothing wrong with the charges – these were correct, all made as per the agreement.

It was in the agreement. Going down to the smaller print of the mortgage deeds, conveniently hidden amongst the endless and tedious legalities (a mortgage agreement has normally about 50 pages of complex verbiage, hard to understand even for a Spaniard not completely familiar with the legal jargon).

The clause that simply was to make the headline rate “EURIBOR plus 0.5%” totally futile, completely irrelevant, as good as not actually entered in the contract. This was the floor clause.

No one mentioned it to the borrowers initially, but somewhere in the contract there was a clause setting the floor and cap levels.

The floor clause meant that regardless how low was the benchmark or official mark linked to the mortgage (EURIBOR), there was a floor in place: a minimum interest to apply to the mortgage every month.

For instance, if the floor clause is set at 4 %, it didn’t matter that the rate of reference rate would go down to 1%, because if the sum of this rate to the spread gives less than four, then 4 % would be the interest to pay.

The borrowers complained about it to their banks in two ways, closely related one to the other: firstly, it is unfair that they do not benefit from the cut in the interest rates of the reference rate (the EURIBOR has been below 2% for 4 years now, from 2009 to 2013.

Secondly, it is there in the agreement, but nobody explained it clearly.

However, the banks refused firmly to discuss it, retorting in all cases to the same reply – you signed the agreement freely, and now it’s final in all its clauses enforceable, there’s nothing they will do about it.

The aftermath

Since the banks rejected even to consider discussions with their clients, so the claims started to reach the Courts, profusely, and all based on the same grounds; that something essential to the agreement, such as the cap and floor clauses, should have been explained precisely and more into detail, not left in a clause towards the end of the contract.

The first Judgements were dubious – it was a new circumstance, a dispute based upon complex, unique financial terms and conditions. Some Judges ruled favouring the banks – after all, there was an agreement and witnessed by a Notary.

However, the Higher Court, and eventually the Supreme Court, all ruled in the same direction in their pronouncements of the appeals (which came by the thousands): the clauses are obscure, very difficult to understand, hence they must be declared abusive and taken off the agreements.

Even if there was an agreement in place, and it was freely signed by the borrower, the general rules on financial contracts state that the essential clauses of an agreement (and the applicable interest rate is one of them) must be discussed individually and must be stated clearly in the document to sign.

The Supreme Court issued a historical Judgement (May 9th 2013) ruling illegal all floor clauses entered in the mortgage contracts from BBVA and two other Spanish banks. The conclusions of this document works like a handbook on the use of floor clauses in fair contracting:

The Courts must protect the weaker party in an agreement, usually the consumer against the lender.A clause is abusive when: a) it limits only the rights of the consumer, and b) it has not been negotiated and discussed individually between the parties.

The professionals (the banks) must prove that they offered to discuss the essential clauses individually, and has offered the consumer (the borrower) alternatives.

Any clause deemed abusive must be taken off the agreement, retroactively, i.e. not from the moment it’s declared abusive, but from the date the contract was agreed.

If your mortgage agreement contains cap & floor clauses, please don’t hesitate to contact us. We handle all client cases on an individual basis, rather than as part of an action group.

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